Current Initiatives
Current Initiatives at the Center
Focus areas of current initiatives include providing research, evaluation, technical assistance, capacity-building, and workforce development in partnerships with other academic institutions, practitioners from community-based organizations, government and industry. Through these partnerships the Center strives to build responsive and sustainable health systems and strong rural and migrant health organizations.
Current initiatives
2025 Pilot Grants
Request for Pilot Grant Proposals
Proposal Deadline: March 28th, 2025
Funding: $15,000 per proposal
Background:
The Center for Rural and Migrant Health is soliciting proposals of outstanding scientific merit addressing research, including translational, on health issues impacting rural and migrant/immigrant populations. Additionally, we are interested in supporting research which aligns with the Rural Public Health Strategic Plan outlined by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
All funded project teams are expected to use pilot grant funding to gather preliminary data or test the feasibility of an intervention program to submit competitive applications to external funding agencies for continuation of the research.
Funding:
Research teams may request up to $15,000 over a period two years.
Eligibility:
The PIs must be a tenured/tenure-track, research, or clinical faculty member at or above the assistant professor rank at Purdue University.
The study team must comprised at least two PIs from two different academic units.
The PIs must hold an affiliation with the Center for Rural and Migrant Health. To become a Center affiliate, please go here.
Projects that meaningfully partner with community organizations and/or other stakeholders are preferred. At least one award will be made to a team that engages a nonprofit entity serving rural and/or migrant/immigrant communities.
Budget Restrictions:
- Faculty salary is not allowed.
- Indirect costs are not allowed.
Application Guidelines:
*Please note that proposals do not need to go through SPS
- Cover Page
- Proposal title
- Name and affiliation of all investigators. Please also include office address, e-mail, and phone number for the contact PI.
- Total budget requested
- NIH Style Project Summary:
- A succinct and accurate description of the proposed work
- 30 lines of text or less
- Should be informative to other people working in the same or related fields and understandable to a scientifically literate reader.
- Include the project’s broad, long-term objectives and specific aims, and a description of the research design and methods.
- Research Plan (single spaced using 11-point font or larger with 1-inch margins on all sides. Not to exceed three pages. Reference list is not included in the three-page limit).
- Specific aims of the project
- Background and significance
- Research approach
- Relevance to rural and migrant/immigrant communities
- Detailed plans for seeking external funding
- Biosketches for Research Team
- NIH style for Purdue research team and collaborators from other academic institutions
- Resume/CV for community partners
- Budget Justification
Submission:
A single submission packet (.pdf) should be emailed to rural@purdue.edu prior to the close of business on the due date.
Review Process:
Applications will be reviewed and ranked by a committee determined by the CRMH leadership. This may include those with scientific, translational, and community expertise. Selected nominations will be recommended to the CRMH leadership, and the leadership team will meet with investigators for final approval of funding.
Reporting Requirements for Awarded Teams:
- Acknowledge the CRMH funding in all presentations/publications that benefitted from this award.
- At the end of the award period provide the CRMH advisory boards with a report detailing accomplished aims, obstacles encountered and actions taken to rectify them, and a list of publications, presentations, and/or grants submitted based on data generated by this award.
- Funded teams will be asked to present findings at future CRMH events, which may included to our advisory boards.
Questions:
For questions regarding the grant, please contact Dr. Randolph Hubach at rural@purdue.edu.
Community Health Worker Training Program (CHWTP)
The Community health workers (CHWs) is funded by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). CHWs are intended to build individual and community capacity by increasing self- sufficiency and health knowledge through activities such as outreach, community education, informal counseling, social support, and advocacy. CHWs improve clinical outcomes for chronic and other health conditions that disproportionately impact Black, Hispanic, and rural populations in Indiana. Purdue University, through its Community Health Worker Development Institute (CHWDI), and in partnership with key stakeholders. The goals of the CHW grant are:
- Expand the public health workforce by training new and existing CHWs and
health support workers with specialized training and financial support to offset
expenses that would impede success in training. The Program’s goal is to
provide training so that 75% of participants become newly credentialed CHWs
and health support workers. - Extend and upskill the public health workforce by developing new or enhancing
existing curriculums to increase the skills and competencies of existing CHWs
and health support workers. - Increase CHW and health support worker employment readiness through field
placements and apprenticeships developed in collaboration with a network of
partnerships that will enable trainees to respond to and support essential public
health services and provide them with employment opportunities. - Advance health equity and support for underserved communities by increasing
the number of CHWs and health support workers that are employed as integral
members of integrated care teams that use their expanded skills to reduce health
disparities.
Ending the HIV Epidemic in Rural America
The continuum of care (e.g., prevention, screening, and linkage to care) for HIV and sexually
transmitted infections (STIs) are unreliable in rural areas of the United States (U.S.). Geographic
isolation and poverty may increase need for basic human services and further confound screening
and care. Since engagements with the care continuum are positively correlated with prognosis and negatively correlated with disease transmission, there remains a critical public health need to address vulnerable populations in rural, underserved areas through the development of the care continuum.
Those living in rural areas of the U.S. are less likely to engage in routine HIV and STI testing, identify
HIV and STI testing resources, or receive comprehensive HIV and STI education. Current projects
include:
- e-HERO: Funded by NIH (NIMHD 3U54MD012388-05S2) and with partnership with Northern
Arizona University and Oklahoma State University, the goal of e-HERO is to increase HIV and
syphilis testing and linkage to care, increase condom use, and promote PrEP uptake among
sexual minority men (SMM) and American Indian (AI) men in rural Oklahoma, a state that is
an Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE) priority state. - 3T-Prevent: Funded by NIH (R34 MH129208) and in partnership with the Medical College of
Wisconsin and Oklahoma State University, the goal of 3T-Prevent is to develop and pilot 3T-
Prevent (i.e., telementoring, treatment, testing, and prevention) in three HIV/STI testing clinics
in Oklahoma. Intervention activities include detailing clinics and providers to support
distribution of HIV and syphilis self-testing kits with patient-delivered partner therapy (PDPT)
to sexual minority men; training and telementoring providers to deliver theoretically guided
counseling sessions to support self-testing, PDPT, and HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP)
use among patients and partners; and optimizing PrEP prescribing/referrals and linkage to
HIV care.