APPLICATION PERIOD: ?/B>September 1, 2006 through
December 1, 2006, 8 p.m. EST
THIS ANNOUNCEMENT ADDRESSES THE FOLLOWING
TOPICS:· ?nbsp;
- Purpose of this Announcement
- Where to Obtain Additional Information
- Program Objectives
- Funds Available
- Award Criteria
- Eligible Applicants
- Receipt, Peer Review, and Review Schedule
- Application Materials (New and Renewal Applications)
- Renewal Applications
- Program Administration and Details
- Required Federal Citations
PURPOSE OF THIS ANNOUNCEMENT
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) announces the
availability of educational loan repayment under the NIH Extramural Pediatric
Research Loan Repayment Program (PR-LRP).?The Loan Repayment Program for
Pediatric Research provides for the repayment of up to $35,000 of the principal
and interest of the extant educational loans of such health professionals for
each year of obligated service.?Payments equal to 39 percent of total loan
repayments are issued to the Internal Revenue Service on behalf of program
participants to offset Federal tax liabilities incurred.?
The purpose of the Pediatric Research Loan Repayment
Program is the recruitment and retention of highly qualified health
professionals as pediatric investigators.?Through this notice, the NIH invites
qualified health professionals who contractually agree to engage in pediatric
research for at least two years, and who agree to engage in such research for at
least 50 percent of their work schedule (not less than 20 hours per week based
on a 40-hour work week), to apply for participation in the NIH Pediatric
Research Loan Repayment Program.
PR-LRP applications will be accepted September 1 through
December 1, 2006. They must be submitted via the NIH Loan Repayment Website, www.lrp.nih.gov.
WHERE TO OBTAIN ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
For questions on the PR-LRP program, please see the LRP
website at http://www.lrp.nih.gov, send an
email to lrp@nih.gov, or call the LRP helpline
at (866) 849-4047.
Direct your remaining questions regarding your research
project to the relevant NIH scientific program contact listed on the LRP website
at www.lrp.nih.gov/contact/index.htm.
PROGRAM OBJECTIVES
The objective of the program is to recruit and retain
highly qualified health professionals as pediatric investigators.?nbsp;
NIH defines pediatric research as €œresearch that is
directly related to diseases, disorders, and other conditions in children.€?/P>
FUNDS AVAILABLE
The NIH intends to commit approximately $17 million in
Fiscal Year 2007 to fund approximately 400 PR-LRP individuals.
AWARD CRITERIA
Applications for the PR-LRP are evaluated against the
following components as they relate to the likelihood that the applicant will
continue in a pediatric research career:
a. Potential of the applicant to pursue
a career in pediatric research.
- Appropriateness of the applicant's previous training and
experience to prepare him/her for a pediatric research career.
- Suitability of the applicant's proposed pediatric research
activities in the two-year loan repayment period to foster a research career.
- Assessment of the applicant's commitment to a research
career as reflected by the personal statement of long-term career goals and the
plan outlined to achieve those goals.
- Strength of recommendations attesting to the applicant's
potential for a research career.
b.?Quality of the overall environment to prepare the
applicant for a pediatric research career.
- Availability of appropriate scientific colleagues to
achieve and/or enhance the applicant's research independence.
- Quality and appropriateness of institutional resources and
facilities.
Renewal applications are competitive and are evaluated
using the same criteria as new applications plus two additional criteria - an
assessment of research accomplishments and development of an individual as an
independent investigator.
ELIGIBLE APPLICANTS
Specific eligibility criteria with regard to participation
in the Pediatric Research Loan Repayment Program include the following:
1.?Applicants must be citizens, nationals, or permanent
resident of the United States;
2.?Applicants must have a M.D., Ph.D., Pharm. D., Psy.D.,
D.O., D.D.S., D.M.D., D.P.M., D.V.M., D.C., N.D., or equivalent doctoral degree
from an accredited institution;
3.?Applicants must have total qualifying educational loan
debt equal to or in excess of 20 percent of their institutional base salary on
the date of program eligibility (the effective date that a loan repayment
contract has been executed by the Secretary of Health and Human Services or
designee), expected to be between July and September, 2007.?Institutional base
salary is the annual amount that the organization pays for the participant's
appointment, whether the time is spent in research, teaching, patient care, or
other activities.?Institutional base salary excludes any income that a
participant may earn outside the duties of the organization.?Institutional base
salary may not include or comprise any income (salary or wages) earned as a
Federal employee;
4.?Applicants must conduct qualifying research supported
by a domestic non-profit foundation, non-profit professional association, or
other non-profit institution, or a U.S. or other government agency (Federal,
State, or local).?A domestic foundation, professional association, or
institution is considered to be non-profit if exempt from Federal tax under the
provisions of Section 501 of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 501);? ?nbsp;
5.?Applicants must engage in qualified pediatric
research. Pediatric research is defined as €œresearch
that is directly related to diseases, disorders, and other conditions in
children€?
6.?Applicants must engage in qualified clinical research
that represents 50 percent of their level of effort and consumes an average of
at least 20 hours per week during each quarterly service period.?That is,
during each contract quarter, participants must conduct the required research
for a minimum of 240 hours (based on a 12-week quarter) or 260 hours (based on a
13-week quarter);
7.?Part-time Federal employees working 20 hours per week
or less who are (a) not conducting research as a Federal employee, and (b) whose
funding source is from a domestic non-profit source as defined in number 4 of
this section, are eligible to apply for loan repayment if they meet all other
eligibility requirements;
8.?Applicants must agree to conduct research for which
funding is not prohibited by Federal law, regulation, or HHS/NIH policy.?
Recipients who receive LRP awards must conduct their research in accordance with
applicable Federal, State and local law (e.g., applicable human subject
protection regulations); ?nbsp;
9.?Applicants will not be excluded from
consideration under the Pediatric Research LRP on the basis of age, race,
culture, religion, gender, sexual orientation, disability, or other non-merit
factors; and
10.?No individual may submit more than one LRP application
to the NIH in any fiscal year.?Individuals who have applied previously for the
PR-LRP but did not receive an award are eligible to submit a new application if
they meet all of the above eligibility criteria.
11.?Recipients of a Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research
Service Award (NRSA) support from an individual postdoctoral fellowship (F32) or
an institutional research training grant (T32) will be eligible for loan
repayment during the second year of NRSA support if a formal extension of the
NRSA service payback is granted (see http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PA-06-468.html).?
Concurrent repayment of LRP and NRSA service obligations is prohibited.
The following individuals are ineligible for participation
in the Pediatric Research Loan Repayment Program:
1.?Persons who are not United States citizens, nationals,
or permanent residents;
2.?Any individual who has a Federal judgment lien against
his/her property arising from a Federal debt is barred from receiving Federal
funds until the judgment is paid in full or satisfied;
3.?Any individual who owes an obligation of health
professional service to the Federal Government, a State, or other entity, unless
deferrals or extensions are granted for the length of their Extramural Loan
Repayment Program service obligation.?The following are examples of programs
with service obligations that disqualify an applicant from consideration, unless
a deferral for the length of participation in the Loan Repayment Program for
Pediatric Researchers is obtained:
- Armed Forces (Army, Navy, or Air Force) Professions Scholarship Program,
- Exceptional Financial Need (EFN) Scholarship Program,
- Financial Assistance for Disadvantaged Health Professions Students (FADHPS),
- Indian Health Service (IHS) Scholarship Program,
- National Health Service Corps (NHSC) Scholarship Program,
- National Institutes of Health Undergraduate Scholarship Program (UGSP),
- Physicians Shortage Area Scholarship Program,
- Primary Care Loan (PCL) Program,
- Public Health Service (PHS) Scholarship Program, and
- National Research Service Award (NRSA) Program;
4.?Individuals who are employed by the Federal government
with work schedules of more than 20 hours per week;
5.?Current recipients of NIH Intramural Research Training
Awards (IRTA) or Cancer Research Training Awards (CRTA);
6.?Individuals conducting research for which funding is
precluded by Federal law, regulations or HHS/NIH policy, or that does not comply
with applicable Federal, State, and local law regarding the conduct of the
research (e.g., applicable human subject protection regulations); and
7.?Individuals with ineligible loans, which include loans
that have been consolidated with a loan of another individual (including spouses
or children), or loans that are not educational, such as home equity loans.
Upon receipt, applications for both initial and renewal
awards will be reviewed for eligibility and completeness by the NIH Loan
Repayment Program.?Incomplete or ineligible applications will not be
considered.?Applications that are complete and eligible will be forwarded to
the NIH Center for Scientific Review (CSR), which will assign the application to
an NIH Institute or Center for peer review.
Application Receipt Date:?September 1, 2006?-?December
1, 2006, 8 P.M. EST
Peer Review Date: March-May,
2007
Anticipated Award Date: July - September, 2007
APPLICATION MATERIALS (New and Renewal Applicants)
The following information is furnished by applicants or
others on behalf of applicants (forms are completed electronically at the NIH
LRP Web-site at www.lrp.nih.gov), and must
be submitted from September 1, 2006, through December 1, 2006, 8 PM EST:
Applicants electronically transmit the following to the NIH
Division of Loan Repayment:
- Applicant information statement.
- Biosketch.
- Personal statement, which includes a discussion of career goals and academic
objectives.
- Description of research activities, which describes the current or proposed
research project including the specific responsibilities and role of the
applicant in conducting the research.?The research supervisor or mentor will be
asked to concur.
- Identification of three recommenders (including research supervisor or
mentor).
- Identification of institutional contact.
- On-line certification.
- Loan information, including current account statement(s), and promissory
note(s) or disclosure statement(s), obtained from lending institution(s),
submitted via facsimile to 866-849-4046.
- If applying based on NIH debt, Notice of Grant/Award (or PHS Form 2271 for
Ruth L. Kirschstein NRSA training fellowships).
Research supervisors or mentors electronically transmit the
following to the NIH Division of Loan Repayment:
- Recommendation.
- Biosketch.
- Assessment of the research activities statement submitted by the applicant.
- Description of the research environment, which provides detailed information
about the lab where the applicant is or will be conducting research, including
funding, lab space, and major areas under
investigation.
- Training or mentoring plan, which includes a detailed discussion of the
training or mentoring plan, including a discussion of the research methods and
scientific techniques to be taught.
Recommenders electronically
transmit recommendation forms to the NIH Division of Loan Repayment.
Institutional contacts electronically transmit a
certification to the NIH Division of Loan Repayment that:
- assures the applicant will be provided the necessary time and resources to
engage in the research project for two years from the date a Loan Repayment
Program contract is executed;
- ssures the applicant is or will be engaged in qualifying research for 50
percent of their work effort for an average of 20 hours per week (a total of 240
hours spent on research during a 12-week quarter, or a total of?260 hours spent
on research during a 13-week quarter);
- certifies the sponsoring entity is a domestic non-profit institution (exempt
from tax under 26 USC 501); and
- identifies the applicant's institutional base salary.?nbsp;
RENEWAL APPLICATIONS
Recipients who wish to extend their NIH loan repayment
should re-apply during this application cycle if the term of their current LRP
contract will end in 2006 - 2007 or their previous contract has ended.
LRP renewal contracts are available for one- and two-year
periods and are based upon the same criteria as the initial application plus two
additional criteria - an assessment of research accomplishments and development
of an individual as an independent investigator.?An explanation of research
accomplishments during the initial award period is required.?Progress toward
development as an independent investigator is a major factor in awarding renewal
of loan repayment support.?Renewal LRP awards are competitive and submission of
a renewal application does not assure the award of loan repayment.
PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION AND DETAILS
Under the Pediatric Research Loan Repayment Program, the
NIH will repay a portion of the extant qualified educational loan debt incurred
to pay for the researcher's undergraduate, graduate, and/or health professional
school educational expenses.?Individuals must have total qualified educational
debt that equals or exceeds 20 percent of their institutional base salary
on the date of program eligibility.?This is called the debt threshold.?
The formula used to calculate the potential annual loan repayment amount is
total educational debt less the participant obligation (an amount
equal to 10 percent of institutional base salary), which yields the total
repayable debt; the total repayable debt is divided by 25 percent,
which yields the potential annual repayment amount (up to $35,000).?nbsp;
Failure to fulfill the terms of the LRP contract will
result in termination of the LRP, or could be considered a breach of contract.?
The penalty for a breach of contract is $7500 for every month of unfulfilled
service or a minimum of $31,000, whichever is higher.
LRP service obligation and NRSA service payback cannot
overlap and permission to defer NRSA payback must be obtained prior to receipt
of LRP funding.
Following is an example of loan repayment calculations:?An
applicant has a loan debt of $100,000 and a university base salary of $40,000.?
Since the loan debt exceeds the debt threshold (20 percent of university
base salary = $8,000), the applicant has sufficient debt for loan repayment
consideration.?The participant obligation is 10 percent of the
institutional base salary, in this case $4,000.?Thus, repayment of the $4,000
debt is the applicant's responsibility.?The remaining amount, in this example
$96,000 (total repayable debt) will be considered for repayment on a
graduated basis. In this case, the maximum to be repaid in the initial
two-year contract is $48,000 or $24,000 per year, plus tax reimbursement
benefits.
Repayable debt is not a fixed dollar amount.?
Throughout the LRP contract period, the repayable debt changes each time a
participant's loan balance or interest rate is updated.?The repayable debt will
be paid at the rate of one-quarter per year, subject to a statutory limit of
$35,000 per year, for each year of obligated service.?Individuals are required
to initially engage in 2 years of qualified pediatric research.
The NIH will repay lenders for the extant principal,
interest, and related expenses (such as the required insurance premiums on the
unpaid balances of some loans) of educational loans from a U.S. government
entity, academic institution, or a commercial or other chartered U.S. lending
institution, such as banks, credit unions, savings and loan associations,
not-for-profit organizations, insurance companies, and other financial or credit
institutions which are subject to examination and supervision in their capacity
as lending institutions by an agency of the United States or of the State in
which the lender has its principal place of business, obtained by participants
for the following:
- Undergraduate, graduate, and health professional school tuition expenses;
- Other reasonable educational expenses required by the school(s) attended,
including fees, books, supplies, educational equipment and materials, and
laboratory expenses; and
- Reasonable living expenses, including the cost of room and board,
transportation and commuting costs, and other living expenses as determined by
the Secretary.
Repayments are made directly to lenders, following receipt of (1) the
Principal Investigator, Program Director, or Research Supervisor's verification
of completion of the prior period of research, and (2) lender verification of
the crediting of prior loan repayments, including the resulting account balances
and current account status.?The NIH will repay loans in the following order,
unless the Secretary determines that significant savings would result from a
different order of priority:
- Loans guaranteed by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services:
- Health Education Assistance Loan (HEAL);
- Health Professions Student Loan (HPSL);
- Loans for Disadvantaged Students (LDS); and
- Nursing Student Loan Program (NSL);
- Loans guaranteed by the U.S. Department of Education:
- Direct Subsidized Stafford Loan;
- Direct Unsubsidized Stafford Loan;
- Direct Consolidation Loan;
- Perkins Loan;
- FFEL Subsidized Stafford Loan;
- FFEL Unsubsidized Stafford Loan; and
- FFEL Consolidation Loan;
- PLUS Loans disbursed to graduate and professional students on or after July
1, 2006.?PLUS loans to parents do not qualify.
- Loans made or guaranteed by a State, the District of Columbia, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or a territory or possession of the United
States;
- Loans made by academic institutions; and
- Private ("Alternative") Educational Loans:
- MEDLOANS; and
- Private (non-guaranteed) Consolidation Loans.
The following loans are NOT repayable under the Loan
Repayment Program for Pediatric Researchers:
- Loans not obtained from a U.S. or other government entity, academic
institution, or a commercial or other chartered U.S. lending institution such as
loans from friends, relatives, or other individuals, and non-educational loans,
such as home equity loans;
- Loans for which contemporaneous documentation (current account statement,
and promissory note or lender disclosure statement) is not available;
- Loans that have been consolidated with loans of other individuals, such as a
spouse or child;
- Loans or portions of loans obtained for educational or living expenses,
which exceed a reasonable level, as determined by the standard school budget for
the year in which the loan was made, and are not determined by the LRP to be
reasonable based on additional contemporaneous documentation provided by the
applicant;
- Loans, financial debts, or service obligations incurred under the following
programs, or other programs that incur a service obligation that converts to a
loan on failure to satisfy the service obligation:
- Armed Forces (Army, Navy, or Air Force) Health Professions Scholarship
Program;
- Indian Health Service (IHS) Scholarship Program;
- National Institutes of Health Undergraduate Scholarship Program (UGSP);
- National Research Service Award (NRSA) Program;
- Physicians Shortage Area Scholarship Program (Federal or State);
- Primary Care Loan (PCL) Program; and
- Public Health Service (PHS) and National Health Service Corps (NHSC)
Scholarship Program;
- Delinquent loans, loans in default, or loans not current in their payment
schedule;
- PLUS Loans;
- Loans that have been paid in full; and
- Loans obtained after the execution of the NIH Loan Repayment Program
Contract (e.g., promissory note signed after the LRP contract has been
awarded).?This provision does not apply to qualifying loan consolidations.
Before the commencement of loan repayment, or during lapses in loan
repayments, due to NIH administrative complications, Leave Without Pay (LWOP),
or a break in service, LRP participants are wholly responsible for making
payments or other arrangements that maintain loans current, such that increases
in either principal or interest do not occur.?The LRP contract period will not
be modified or extended as a result of Leave Without Pay (LWOP) or a break in
service.?Penalties assessed participants as a result of NIH administrative
complications to maintain a current payment status may not be considered for
reimbursement.
LRP payments are NOT retroactive.?Loan repayment for Fiscal Year 2007 will
commence after a loan repayment contract has been executed, which is expected to
be no earlier than July 2007.
CITATIONS OF FEDERAL AUTHORITY
Awards are made pursuant to the Children's Health Act of
2000 (Public Law 106-310), which added Section 487F of the Public Health Service
(PHS) Act (42 U.S.C. 288-6).?The Federal Debt Collection Procedures Act of
1990, contained in Public Law 101-647, requires that an individual that has a
judgment lien against his/her property for a debt to the United States shall not
be eligible to receive funds directly from the Federal government in any
program, except funds to which the debtor is entitled as a beneficiary, until
the judgment is paid in full or otherwise satisfied (28 USC 3201).
The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance number for the
LRP for Pediatric Research is 93.285.