D43TW012189
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Guyana Research in Injury and Trauma Training (GRITT) Program - Self-Harm, Violence, and Road Accidents, the leading causes of mortality in Guyana, engender preventable, yet sustained public health crises.
Guyana's trauma/injury mortality burden is the highest in South America, with its suicide rate (80% pesticide ingestion) the third highest in the world. Fortunately, the Guyanese leadership, both academic and governmental, have demonstrated a strong public health commitment to addressing these problems. Unfortunately, however, the country does not currently have research capacity in trauma/injury prevention on which to build evidence-based, context-specific prevention strategies.
We propose, therefore, a cross-national, cross-institutional collaboration to transition their current capacity in trauma/injury research by jointly creating the Guyana Research in Injury and Trauma Training (GRITT) Program, a sister program of the Columbia (University) Center for Injury Science and Prevention (CCISP). GRITT will provide in-depth training in research design and methods, combined with jointly mentoring trainees through intensive, hands-on research projects and by facilitating entry into advanced degree programs (Masters or Ph.D.).
GRITT will be built on collaboration between Columbia University and Guyana's Ministry of Health ongoing NIMH funded longitudinal epidemiological national study of suicide. The primary institutions devoted to establishing and sustaining GRITT are the University of Guyana, Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation, and Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health Dept. of Epidemiology.
In a transparent, competitive process designed to ensure under-represented participation, GRITT will train along four pathways, allowing for variations in discipline, levels of expertise, professional roles, and geared toward the pursuit of a Masters or Ph.D. in the area of trauma/injury research. The four research training pathways are:
(1) Health professionals in the Accident and Emergency Department and the Guyana Emergency Medical Services will receive individual mentoring and participate in collaborative on-the-job research projects designed to enhance careers as researchers in trauma/injury prevention.
(2) Medical residents will be offered training in research methods and group/individual mentoring focused on trauma/injury.
(3) Masters students (public health, nursing, social work, psychology, education, pharmacy) will be offered research-focused virtual courses, intensive summer training, and a jointly mentored research practicum/project on a trauma/injury topic, geared to the pursuit of a research career, including a Ph.D.
(4) Health care post-Bacs, participating in a Columbia University certificate program, will receive online training in research methods and will be supported for a Masters degree focused on injury/trauma prevention.
Also, in the first six months and then on a regular basis, GRITT faculty, staff, and local mentors will participate in workshops focused on research methods, including identification of projects for faculty/students, e.g., self-harm, interpersonal violence, road accidents. Workshops will also include effective mentoring techniques and establish interactive learning approaches for the shared virtual monthly trauma/injury seminar series at CCISP.
Guyana's trauma/injury mortality burden is the highest in South America, with its suicide rate (80% pesticide ingestion) the third highest in the world. Fortunately, the Guyanese leadership, both academic and governmental, have demonstrated a strong public health commitment to addressing these problems. Unfortunately, however, the country does not currently have research capacity in trauma/injury prevention on which to build evidence-based, context-specific prevention strategies.
We propose, therefore, a cross-national, cross-institutional collaboration to transition their current capacity in trauma/injury research by jointly creating the Guyana Research in Injury and Trauma Training (GRITT) Program, a sister program of the Columbia (University) Center for Injury Science and Prevention (CCISP). GRITT will provide in-depth training in research design and methods, combined with jointly mentoring trainees through intensive, hands-on research projects and by facilitating entry into advanced degree programs (Masters or Ph.D.).
GRITT will be built on collaboration between Columbia University and Guyana's Ministry of Health ongoing NIMH funded longitudinal epidemiological national study of suicide. The primary institutions devoted to establishing and sustaining GRITT are the University of Guyana, Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation, and Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health Dept. of Epidemiology.
In a transparent, competitive process designed to ensure under-represented participation, GRITT will train along four pathways, allowing for variations in discipline, levels of expertise, professional roles, and geared toward the pursuit of a Masters or Ph.D. in the area of trauma/injury research. The four research training pathways are:
(1) Health professionals in the Accident and Emergency Department and the Guyana Emergency Medical Services will receive individual mentoring and participate in collaborative on-the-job research projects designed to enhance careers as researchers in trauma/injury prevention.
(2) Medical residents will be offered training in research methods and group/individual mentoring focused on trauma/injury.
(3) Masters students (public health, nursing, social work, psychology, education, pharmacy) will be offered research-focused virtual courses, intensive summer training, and a jointly mentored research practicum/project on a trauma/injury topic, geared to the pursuit of a research career, including a Ph.D.
(4) Health care post-Bacs, participating in a Columbia University certificate program, will receive online training in research methods and will be supported for a Masters degree focused on injury/trauma prevention.
Also, in the first six months and then on a regular basis, GRITT faculty, staff, and local mentors will participate in workshops focused on research methods, including identification of projects for faculty/students, e.g., self-harm, interpersonal violence, road accidents. Workshops will also include effective mentoring techniques and establish interactive learning approaches for the shared virtual monthly trauma/injury seminar series at CCISP.
Funding Goals
THE JOHN E. FOGARTY INTERNATIONAL CENTER (FIC) SUPPORTS RESEARCH AND RESEARCH TRAINING TO REDUCE DISPARITIES IN GLOBAL HEALTH AND TO FOSTER PARTNERSHIPS BETWEEN U.S. SCIENTISTS AND THEIR COUNTERPARTS ABROAD. FIC SUPPORTS BASIC BIOLOGICAL, BEHAVIORAL, AND SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH, AS WELL AS RELATED RESEARCH TRAINING AND CAREER DEVELOPMENT. THE RESEARCH PORTFOLIO IS DIVIDED INTO SEVERAL PROGRAMS THAT SUPPORT A WIDE VARIETY OF FUNDING MECHANISMS TO MEET PROGRAMMATIC OBJECTIVES.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
New York,
New York
100323727
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 394% from $266,575 to $1,317,182.
The Trustees Of Columbia University In The City Of New York was awarded
GRITT Program: Trauma/Injury Research Training
Project Grant D43TW012189
worth $1,317,182
from Fogarty International Center in September 2021 with work to be completed primarily in New York New York United States.
The grant
has a duration of 5 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.989 International Research and Research Training.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Fogarty Global Trauma and Injury Research Training Program (D43 Clinical Trial Optional).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 8/20/25
Period of Performance
9/15/21
Start Date
8/31/26
End Date
Funding Split
$1.3M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$1.3M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for D43TW012189
Transaction History
Modifications to D43TW012189
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
D43TW012189
SAI Number
D43TW012189-2302253681
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Private Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75NF00 NIH Fogarty International Center
Funding Office
75NF00 NIH Fogarty International Center
Awardee UEI
QHF5ZZ114M72
Awardee CAGE
3FHD3
Performance District
NY-13
Senators
Kirsten Gillibrand
Charles Schumer
Charles Schumer
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| John E. Fogarty International Center, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0819) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $524,265 | 100% |
Modified: 8/20/25