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Environmental Health

Program Information

Popular name

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences

Program Number

93.113

Program objective

To foster understanding of human health effects of exposure to environmental agents in the hope that these studies will lead to: the identification of agents that pose a hazard and threat of disease, disorders and defects in humans; the development of effective public health or disease prevention strategies; the overall improvement of human health effects due to environmental agents; the development of products and technologies designed to better study or ameliorate the effects of environmental agents; and the successful training of research scientists in all areas of environmental health research. Supported grant programs focus on the following areas: (1) Understanding biological responses to environmental agents by determining how chemical and physical agents cause pathological changes in molecules, cells, tissues, and organs, and become manifested as respiratory disease, neurological, behavioral and developmental abnormalities, cancer, and other disorders; (2) Determining the mechanisms of toxicity of ubiquitous agents like metals, natural and synthetic chemicals, pesticides, and materials such as nanoparticles, and natural toxic substances, and their effects of on various human organ systems, on metabolism, on the endocrine and immune systems, and on other biological functions; (3) Developing and integrating scientific knowledge about potentially toxic and hazardous chemicals by concentrating on toxicological research, testing, test development, validation and risk estimation; (4) Identifying interactions between environmental stressors and genetic susceptibility and understanding biologic mechanisms underlying these interactions, including the study of environmental influences on epigenomics and transcriptional regulation; (5) Conducting environmental public health research, including in areas of environmental justice and health disparities, that requires communities as active participants in all stages of research, dissemination, and evaluation to advance both the science and the development of practical materials for use in communities, with a focus on translating research findings into tools, materials, and resources that can be used to prevent, reduce, or eliminate adverse health outcomes caused by environmental exposures; (6) Expanding and improving the SBIR program; to increase private sector commercialization of innovations derived from Federal research and development; to increase small business participation in Federal research and development; and to foster and encourage participation of socially and economically disadvantaged small business concerns and women-owned small business concerns in technological innovation; (7) Expanding and improving the STTR program to stimulate and foster scientific and technological innovation through cooperative research and development carried out between small business concerns and research institutions; to foster technology transfer between small business concerns and research institutions; to increase private sector commercialization of innovations derived from Federal research and development; and to foster and encourage participation of socially and economically disadvantaged small business concerns and women-owned small business concerns in technological innovation; (8) Providing support for broadly based multi-disciplinary research and training programs in environmental health .These programs include the Environmental Health Sciences Core Centers , which serve as national focal points and resources for research and manpower development. Through these programs, NIEHS expects to achieve the long-range goal of developing new clinical and public health applications to improve disease prevention, diagnosis, and therapy. Additional Centers programs developed in recent years, include the Centers for Oceans and Human Health (co-funded with NSF), Children's Environmental Health Centers (co-funded with US EPA) and the Autism Centers of Excellence (co-funded with other NIH Institutes), and the Human Health Exposure Analysis Resource (HHEAR) program; (9) Supporting research training programs which serve to increase the pool of trained research manpower with needed expertise in the Environmental Health Sciences through support of Individual and Institutional National Research Service Awards (NRSAs); (10) The Outstanding New Environmental Scientist Program which provides first time research grant funding to outstanding junior scientists in the formative stages of their career who are proposing to make a long term commitment to environmental health sciences research and to address the adverse effects on environmental exposures on human biology, human pathophysiology and human disease.

Program expenditures, by FY (2023 - 2025)

This chart shows obligations for the program by fiscal year. All data for this chart was provided by the administering agency and sourced from SAM.gov, USASpending.gov, and Treasury.gov.

For more information on each of these data sources, please see the About the data page.

Additional program information

  1. 2016

    In FY 2016 NIEHS anticipates issuing 677 RPG awards (including SBIR and STTR Awards), 29 Research Center awards, 34 Individual and 44 Institutional training awards. Initiatives issued for funding in FY 2016 include the following FOAs: 1) NIH Revision Awards for Creating Virtual Consortium for Translational-Transdisciplinary Environmental Research (ViCTER), five awards anticipated 2) Environmental Contributors to Autism Spectrum Disorders, six awards anticipated 3) Impact of Aging on Currently Employed Animal Models of Disease and Chronic Conditions Demonstration Projects, two awards anticipated 4) TaRGET II Environmental Epigenomic Analysis in Tissue Surrogates, five awards anticipated 5) TaRGET II Environmental Epigenomics Data Coordination Center, one award anticpated 6) Outstanding New Environmental Scientist (ONES) Award, five awards anticipated 7) Environmental Health Sciences Core Centers, five awards anticipated 8) Nanomaterials Health Implications Research (NHIR): Comprehensive Evaluation of Interactions between Engineered Nanomaterials and Biological System, eight awards anticipated 9) Nanomaterials Health Implications Research (NHIR): Engineered Nanomaterials Resource and Coordination Core, one award anticipated 10) Ebola Biosafety and Infectious Disease Response Training, eight awards anticipated In FY 2016 NIEHS issued 641 Research Project Grant awards (including SBIR and STTR Awards), 29 Research Center awards, 35 Individual and 43 Institutional training awards. Information about NIEHS present and past Funding Opportunity Announcements (FOA) can be found at https://www.niehs.nih.gov/funding/grants/index.cfm.

  2. 2017

    In FY 2017 NIEHS issued 732 Research Grants, 43 Individual and 41 Institutional training awards.

    Information about funded awards can be found at https://www.niehs.nih.gov/funding/grants/priorities/index.cfm.

    Information about NIEHS present and past Funding Opportunity Announcements (FOAs) can be found at https://www.niehs.nih.gov/funding/grants/announcements/index.cfm

  3. 2018

    Information about funded awards can be found at https://www.niehs.nih.gov/funding/grants/priorities/index.cfm. Information about NIEHS present and past Funding Opportunity Announcements (FOAs) can be found at https://www.niehs.nih.gov/funding/grants/announcements/index.cfm

  4. 2021

    Information about NIEHS Funding Opportunity Announcements (FOAs) can be found at https://www.niehs.nih.gov/funding/grants/announcements/index.cfm

  5. 2022

    Information about NIEHS Notice of Funding Opportunities (NOFO) can be found at https://www.niehs.nih.gov/funding/grants/announcements/index.cfm

Single Audit Applies (2 CFR Part 200 Subpart F):

For additional information on single audit requirements for this program, review the current Compliance Supplement.

OMB is working with the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) and agency offices of inspectors general to include links to relevant oversight reports. This section will be updated once this information is made available.

42 CFR 52; 45 CFR 75; 45 CFR 92; NIH Guide to Grants and Contracts; various other publications and application kits, the Division of Extramural Outreach and Information Resources, Office of Extramural Research, NIH, Room 6207, 6701 Rockledge Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892. Grants will be available under the authority of and administered in accordance with the NIH GPS and Federal regulations at 42 CFR 52 and 42 USC 241; Omnibus Solicitation of the Public Health Service for Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Grant and Cooperative Agreement Applications. Omnibus Solicitation of the National Institutes of Health for Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Grant Applications.

  1. Public Health Service Act, Sections 301, 401, 437, 463 and 487, Public Laws 78-410 and 99-158, as amended, 42 U.S.C. 241, and 42 U.S.C. 288, as amended, SBIR and STTR Reauthorization Act of 2011, Public Law 113-6.

Program details

Eligible beneficiaries

  • Education Professional
  • Federal
  • Federally Recognized Indian Tribal Governments
  • Graduate Student
  • Local
  • Native American Organizations
  • Other private institution/organization
  • Other public institution/organization
  • Private nonprofit institution/organization
  • Profit organization
  • Public nonprofit institution/organization
  • Scientist/Researchers
  • Small business
  • Specialized group (e.g. health professionals, students, veterans)
  • Sponsored organization
  • State
  • Student/Trainee
  • U.S. Territories

Additional resources