HIP Fellow Award Key Information
The HIP Fellow Award, part of the Hematology Inclusion Pathway, encourages early-career researchers from communities underrepresented in hematology in the United States and Canada to pursue a career in academic hematology and provides salary support and funding to support hematology-focused research projects. The funds give fellows in training more time to generate sufficient expertise to be competitive when applying for other awards, such as the ASH-Harold Amos Medical Faculty Development Program, which targets applicants with more extensive research experience and preliminary data.
Program Benefits
The HIP Fellow Award provides up to $100,000 over a two- to three-year period to individuals preparing for academic careers in hematology. The funds give fellows in training more time to generate sufficient expertise to be competitive when applying for other awards which target applicants with more extensive research experience and preliminary data.
Eligibility Requirements
Applicants must meet the following criteria to qualify:
- Identify as being a member of a community that is underrepresented in hematology.
- Applicants must be citizens or permanent residents of the United States or Canada, J1 Visa holders, or have Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) status.
- To be eligible for consideration, an applicant must be planning and committed to conducting the relevant research project in the contiguous United States or Canada with an ASH member mentor.
- Possess an MD/DO, PhD, or MD/DO and PhD degree.
- Be in their first or second year of fellowship at the time of application and plan to pursue a career in hematology research.
- Propose research focused on a hematologic condition.
- Have fewer than three years of research experience after completion of their degree (PhD Postdoctoral Fellow Award applicants only).
- Have clear and documented support of an established mentor who has active funding (e.g., NIH, federal, foundation, or private) and will remain funded for the duration of the award term, or who is recognized through national clinical leadership (if the project is clinical). The mentor must be an ASH member in good standing for the duration of the award term. If the mentor is not in a hematology-related field, a supporting letter from an ASH member is required.
- Provide documented support from the program director for dedicated research time during the award period.
Eligible applicants may not hold other ASH awards during the HIP Fellow Award term. Please note, assistant professors and National Institute of Health employees are not eligible to apply.
Supported Research
Applicants must submit proposals to conduct research in hematology. Proposals that fall within any of the below categories are encouraged:
- Basic Research
- Translational Research
- Patient-Oriented Clinical Research
- Outcomes-Based Research
For additional details on eligible research categories, please consult the Research Definitions page.
HIP Fellow Award and ASH-Harold Amos Medical Faculty Development Award Application Eligibility
Applicants may submit applications to both the HIP Fellow Award and the ASH-Harold Amos Medical Faculty Development Program if they deem themselves eligible for both awards. If an applicant is offered both awards, they can complete their first year of research with the HIP Fellow Award program and begin research under the ASH-Harold Amos Medical Faculty Development Program in the subsequent year.
You should consider applying for ASH-Harold Amos Medical Faculty Development Program if:
- You already have a significant amount of research experience and preliminary data and can benefit from four years of mentored research training.
- You will have completed the clinical portion of your fellowship before the start of the award.
- You are an assistant professor
You should consider applying for the HIP Fellow Award if:
- You are still in fellowship training.
- You have limited to no research experience.
- You still have the clinical portion of your fellowship to complete.
Should you have questions about determining eligibility for these programs, please contact [email protected] and [email protected].
Application Process and Required Materials
The HIP Fellow Award application, as well as all supporting documents outlined below, must be submitted through the .
All applications must include the following:
- Applicant NIH Biographical Sketch
- Research Mentor NIH Biographical Sketch
- Applicant Career Development Plan
- Project Proposal
- Mentor Letter of Support
- Institutional Commitment Letter from Training Program Director
For more information about the required materials, please see the Required Documents PDF.
Evaluation, Selection, and Notification
Applications submitted by the deadline will be reviewed by the HIP Study Section. Accepted applicants and their mentors will receive official notification of acceptance by April/May. Applicants will be evaluated on the following criteria:
- A focus on hematology research
- The applicant鈥檚 qualifications and experiences; factors to be considered include, but are not limited to, the potential for future independent investigation and commitment to a career in hematology research
- Quality of the mentor and the plan for mentor-applicant interaction and career development
- The significance, feasibility, and originality of the proposed hypothesis, research, and methodology
- Availability of institutional resources to support the proposed project
Accepted applicants and their mentors will receive official notification of acceptance by April/May.
ASH-ASTCT Career Development Award
ASH has partnered with the on the ASH-ASTCT Career Development Award to increase the number of hematologists from underrepresented backgrounds in medicine pursuing careers in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and cellular therapy.
In addition to HIP Fellow Award benefits, award recipients will participate in the following ASTCT focused opportunities:
- Attendance at the annual Tandem Meetings of the ASTCT and the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research (CIBMTR)
- Travel costs should be included in the proposed budget for the project
- Meeting registration will be complementary
- Participation in an ASTCT Special Interest Group (SIG).
- Preferential consideration for an ASTCT Leadership Course or Clinical Research Training Course (must apply for consideration).
- Membership on the ASTCT Diversity and Inclusion SIG.
Eligibility and Application Instructions
The ASH-ASTCT Career Development Award is designed for clinical and translational researchers who intend for clinical care of patients to be a part of their future career. Applicants must meet the eligibility requirements for the HIP Fellow Award and have a research project related to hematopoietic stem cell transplantation or other cellular therapies. Applicants will indicate their desire to be considered for the ASH-ASTCT Career Development Award when submitting the HIP Fellow Award application through the .
Terms and Conditions
All awards will be activated on July 1 and will conclude on June 30 of the final year. Payment will be made to the appropriate financial officer for the institution as indicated on the proposed budget form. As a condition of acceptance of the HIP Fellow Award, it is required that:
- All funds be used for the research project specified in the application submitted to ASH in strict compliance with the budget included with the application or any subsequent budget approved by the Society.
- Funds may not be used toward salary/benefits for the mentor or toward an institution's overhead or indirect costs.
- The award recipient cites support from the 91国产精品 in any publication describing research conducted during the period of the award.
- The award recipient dedicates at least 75 percent of his/her full-time professional efforts to research during the funded period.
- The award recipient completes program surveys during and after the award period, which ASH will use to measure the HIP Fellow Award program's effectiveness.
Transfers/Reallocation Requests
In the event the fellow transfers to another institution during the funding period, continuation of the funding at the new institution may be allowed with prior approval from ASH.
In addition, fellows may request a reallocation of funds from one expense category to another.
All transfer and/or reallocation requests must be sent to [email protected].
Changing Mentors
Please contact [email protected] if you need to change primary mentors. This must be approved by the chair of the ASH subcommittee.
Progress and Final Reports
HIP Fellow Award recipients are required to submit to ASH an end of year evaluation form and a current biosketch.
Evaluation Form
The evaluation form is a series of short questions. The form should be accompanied by a letter from a division head or department chair requesting second year funding. It should also provide assurances that the fellow鈥檚 work has progressed and that both appropriate facilities and the mentor will continue to be available.
Fellows with two-year awards will need to submit an evaluation form at the end of the first year of their award. Fellows whose award is spread over three years should submit an evaluation at the end of both the first and second year.
Failure to submit the evaluation report, including the letter, after the first and/or second year will render the fellow ineligible for the second or third year of funding.
Final Reports
A final written report (not to exceed four pages) is expected within 60 days of the end of the award period.
HIP Fellow Award recipients, along with the financial officers from their institutions, must also submit a financial report detailing how the funds were used over the two-or three-year period. This report must be submitted within 60 days of the end of the award period.
Both final reports must be sent to [email protected].