Understanding and Altering Prenatal Immune Function and Parenting to Improve Child Mental Health: Investigating Intergenerational Stress Transmission Mechanisms
About This Grant
PROJECT SUMMARY The Developmental Origins of Health and Disease framework has illuminated that maternal factors during pregnancy, such as exposure to elevated stress, increase children’s risk of mental health problems, via prenatal and postnatal mechanisms. Thus, there is a critical public health imperative to conduct research in this area to understand and ultimately prevent the development of psychopathology. Fetal exposure to elevated maternal inflammation during pregnancy (PMI) increases risk for child psychopathology via placental mechanisms, however, evidence from animal and human models suggests that heightened PMI may also disrupt maternal parenting behaviors. Via a phenomenon called “sickness behaviors,” high levels of inflammation can cause social withdrawal, depression-like feelings, and problems understanding social situations. Although social withdrawal and depressive tendencies may be potentially adaptive, energy- conserving responses that facilitate fighting an infection, affective and social difficulties may impair parents’ ability to recognize and respond optimally to their baby’s signals. Critically, the direct and indirect associations among PMI, parenting, and child mental health have not yet been tested in humans. In this proposal, I will fill critical training gaps in prenatal immune biology, advanced longitudinal statistical modeling, and multidisciplinary intervention research to test 3 Aims. First, I will leverage my primary mentor’s deeply-phenotyped, sociodemographically diverse longitudinal pregnancy cohort of mother-child pairs (n = 1303) to test the novel hypothesis that parenting partially accounts for positive associations between PMI and childhood mental health problems (Aims 1 and 2). Mentored training and findings will inform a pilot intervention study in which I partner with a well-established clinical research program to bridge Aims 1-2 findings with applied solutions (Aim 3). This program delivers an evidence-based intervention targeting traumatic stress exposure (Perinatal Child-Parent Psychotherapy) to pregnant Latina women. In this study, I will collect repeated measures of PMI as well as observations of parenting and infant behavior (n = 20). Preliminary findings from associations among intervention-related changes in PMI, parenting, and infant behavior will validate the mechanism tested in Aims 1 and 2 and lay the groundwork for a follow-on R-34 intervention study testing effects of prenatal psychological intervention on PMI, parenting, and child mental health. Investigating associations between PMI, parenting, and child mental health will elucidate the etiology and maintenance of child psychopathology, as well as mechanisms for targeting prenatal prevention and postnatal intervention. Addressing these potential determinants and solutions are public health and NIMH priorities. Mentored training from this K23 proposal will support my transition to an independent interdisciplinary clinical science career investigating and preventing the intergenerational transmission of stress and psychopathology.
Grant Summary
Understanding and Altering Prenatal Immune Function and Parenting to Improve Child Mental Health: Investigating Intergenerational Stress Transmission Mechanisms is a NIMH - National Institute of Mental Health grant providing up to $200K for university, nonprofit, healthcare org. Applications are due 2031-03-31 (open). Check eligibility and apply with FindGrants.
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How to Apply
Up to $200K
2031-03-31
- 1Confirm your organization is eligible for Understanding and Altering Prenatal Immune Function and Parenting to Improve Child Mental Health: Investigating Intergenerational Stress Transmission Mechanisms from NIMH - National Institute of Mental Health, checking organization type, location, and any population or project requirements.
- 2Gather the required documents and information, including your organization details, project plan, and budget figures.
- 3Draft your application narrative and budget addressing the funder's priorities and review criteria. FindGrants can draft each section for you to review and edit.
- 4Review every section against the requirements checklist, then export a submission-ready application pack and submit it to NIMH - National Institute of Mental Health before the deadline.
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Understanding and Altering Prenatal Immune Function and Parenting to Improve Child Mental Health: Investigating Intergenerational Stress Transmission Mechanisms: Frequently Asked Questions
Who is eligible for the Understanding and Altering Prenatal Immune Function and Parenting to Improve Child Mental Health: Investigating Intergenerational Stress Transmission Mechanisms?
Understanding and Altering Prenatal Immune Function and Parenting to Improve Child Mental Health: Investigating Intergenerational Stress Transmission Mechanisms is offered by NIMH - National Institute of Mental Health and is generally open to university, nonprofit, healthcare org. It is open to organizations nationwide unless the funder specifies otherwise. Review the specific eligibility terms before applying, since funders set their own requirements around organization type, location, and the population or project being served.
How much funding does the Understanding and Altering Prenatal Immune Function and Parenting to Improve Child Mental Health: Investigating Intergenerational Stress Transmission Mechanisms provide?
Understanding and Altering Prenatal Immune Function and Parenting to Improve Child Mental Health: Investigating Intergenerational Stress Transmission Mechanisms provides up to $200K per award from NIMH - National Institute of Mental Health. Actual award sizes depend on the scope of your project, available program funds, and the number of applicants, so build a budget that reflects realistic, allowable costs rather than the maximum figure.
When is the Understanding and Altering Prenatal Immune Function and Parenting to Improve Child Mental Health: Investigating Intergenerational Stress Transmission Mechanisms deadline?
Applications for Understanding and Altering Prenatal Immune Function and Parenting to Improve Child Mental Health: Investigating Intergenerational Stress Transmission Mechanisms are due 2031-03-31 (open). Because deadlines can change, verify the date with the funder, NIMH - National Institute of Mental Health, and give yourself enough time to prepare a complete, competitive application before the close date.
How do you apply for the Understanding and Altering Prenatal Immune Function and Parenting to Improve Child Mental Health: Investigating Intergenerational Stress Transmission Mechanisms?
To apply for Understanding and Altering Prenatal Immune Function and Parenting to Improve Child Mental Health: Investigating Intergenerational Stress Transmission Mechanisms, confirm your eligibility, gather the required documents, and prepare a narrative and budget that address the funder's priorities. FindGrants guides you step by step and can draft each section, then exports a submission-ready application pack for this grant from NIMH - National Institute of Mental Health.