Autism Collaboration, Accountability, Research, Education, and Support

CFDA 93.877 Active Grant Cooperative Agreement

Open Opportunities (1)

Live Grants.gov opportunities funded under this program — you can apply now.

Program Funding

Annual program obligations reported to SAM.gov.

Latest annual funding (estimated)
$36M FY2026
$51.3M
FY24
$51.7M
FY25
$36M
FY26*
* estimated

Who has received this funding

Organizations awarded under CFDA 93.877 (USAspending.gov).

Funded Projects

Examples of what this program has supported.

FY2025 One Autism SIIP, the Autism Transitions Research Project, developed new tools to measure how autistic youth and youth with other special health care needs are thriving as they transition into adulthood. The Thriving Through the Transition into Adulthood Youth Scale and its companion Family Scale address a critical gap in measuring and supporting positive life outcomes for this population. Both tools are currently undergoing rigorous validation to ensure they are reliable, accurate, and adaptable for broad use.

One Autism RN, the Developmental Behavioral Pediatric Research Network, demonstrated that specialists can diagnose ASD without using the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule in 90% of cases and identified which children benefit from its use, reducing diagnostic time and cost.

The Healthy Weight Research Network (HWRN) developed the first tailored clinical recommendations to help pediatric providers manage overweight and obesity in children with autism and other developmental disabilities, addressing gaps in pediatric provider preparedness. These expert guidelines not only informed clinical training but also directly influenced national practice. HWRN Steering Committee members also published a paper calling for healthier lifestyles for children with developmental disabilities, which prompted the American Academy of Pediatrics to issue new weight-management guidelines for this population.
FY2026 One Autism SIIP, the Autism Transitions Research Project, developed new tools to measure how autistic youth and youth with other special health care needs are thriving as they transition into adulthood. The Thriving Through the Transition into Adulthood Youth Scale and its companion Family Scale address a critical gap in measuring and supporting positive life outcomes for this population. Both tools are currently undergoing rigorous validation to ensure they are reliable, accurate, and adaptable for broad use.

One Autism RN, the Developmental Behavioral Pediatric Research Network, demonstrated that specialists can diagnose ASD without using the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule in 90% of cases and identified which children benefit from its use, reducing diagnostic time and cost.

The Healthy Weight Research Network (HWRN) developed the first tailored clinical recommendations to help pediatric providers manage overweight and obesity in children with autism and other developmental disabilities, addressing gaps in pediatric provider preparedness. These expert guidelines not only informed clinical training but also directly influenced national practice. HWRN Steering Committee members also published a paper calling for healthier lifestyles for children with developmental disabilities, which prompted the American Academy of Pediatrics to issue new weight-management guidelines for this population.

Program Objective

This Program supports activities to: provide information and education on autism and other developmental disabilities (DD) to increase public awareness; promote research into the development and validation of reliable screening tools and interventions for autism and other developmental disabilities and disseminate information; promote early screening of individuals with increased likelihood for autism and other developmental disabilities as early as practicable, given evidence-based screening techniques and interventions; increase the number of professionals who are able to confirm or rule out a diagnosis of autism and other developmental disabilities; and increase the number of professionals able to provide evidence-based interventions for individuals diagnosed with autism or other developmental disabilities. The Autism Research Portfolio includes the Autism Research Consortium (Autism RC), Autism Research Network (Autism RN) Program, Autism Single Investigator Innovation Program (Autism SIIP), Autism Field-Initiated Innovative Research Studies (Autism FIRST) Program, and the Autism Secondary Data Analysis Research (Autism SDAR) Program. The Autism RNs establish and maintain an interdisciplinary, multicenter research forum for scientific collaboration and infrastructure building. They provide national leadership in research to advance the evidence base on effective interventions for children and adolescents with autism and other developmental disabilities (autism/DD) across the lifespan. The Autism RC establishes research infrastructure and advances the evidence base on effective interventions, services, supports, and systems for children and adolescents with autism/DD. ​The Autism RNs develop guidelines for interventions and disseminate information as authorized by the Autism CARES Act of 2024 (P.L. 118-180) (Autism CARES Act). The Autism SIIP Program supports focused research on priority, emerging, and underdeveloped research areas in autism and other developmental disabilities (DD), with a special focus on the etiology of autism and transitions. The Autism FIRST Program supports research studies testing the implementation of new/innovative strategies that address critical issues surrounding the health of children and adolescents with autism. These studies collect primary data to analyze public health trends in their chosen area of focus within the autism research field. The Autism SDAR Program supports secondary data analysis of existing publicly available and accessible national databases and/or administrative records to determine the evidence-based practices for interventions that improve the physical and behavioral health of children and adolescents with autism/DD, with a particular focus on addressing barriers to identification, diagnosis, interventions and services among underserved populations and for whom there is limited evidence of the effectiveness of interventions, and limited access to screening, diagnosis, and treatment for autism/DD.

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants

  • U.S. State Government
  • Local
  • Federally Recognized Tribal Government
  • Nonprofit Organization
  • Tribal Government (other)
  • Unrestricted by Entity Type
  • Other

For training grants: eligible applicants include public or nonprofit agencies, including institutions of higher education. For research grants: eligible applicants include any public or private nonprofit entity, including research centers or networks. Faith-based and community-based organizations, Tribes, and tribal organizations are eligible to apply. Any public or private entity is eligible for other project grants.

Beneficiaries

  • U.S. Territory Government
  • Unrestricted by Individual Type
  • Health Professional
  • Unrestricted by Entity Type

U.S. Territories, Individual/Family, Specialized group (e.g. health professionals, students, veterans), Health Professional, Student/Trainee, Graduate Student, Scientist/Researchers, State, Women, Mentally Disabled, Local, Infant (0-5), Child (6-15), Youth (16-21), Public nonprofit institution/organization, Other public institution/organization

For training grants: (1) Trainees in the health professions related to MCH; and (2) mothers and children who receive services through training programs.

For research grants: public or private nonprofit entities, including research centers or networks. For other projects: (1) Public or private agencies, organizations and institutions; and (2) mothers and children, and persons who receive services through the programs.

How to Apply

Award Procedure

Notification is made in writing by a Notice of Award.

Decision Timeline

  • Approval: From 120 to 180 days

Final decisions are made 4 to 6 months after receipt of applications.

Program details & compliance

Description

This Program supports activities to: provide information and education on autism and other developmental disabilities (DD) to increase public awareness; promote research into the development and validation of reliable screening tools and interventions for autism and other developmental disabilities and disseminate information; promote early screening of individuals with increased likelihood for autism and other developmental disabilities as early as practicable, given evidence-based screening techniques and interventions; increase the number of professionals who are able to confirm or rule out a diagnosis of autism and other developmental disabilities; and increase the number of professionals able to provide evidence-based interventions for individuals diagnosed with autism or other developmental disabilities. The Autism Research Portfolio includes the Autism Research Consortium (Autism RC), Autism Research Network (Autism RN) Program, Autism Single Investigator Innovation Program (Autism SIIP), Autism Field-Initiated Innovative Research Studies (Autism FIRST) Program, and the Autism Secondary Data Analysis Research (Autism SDAR) Program. The Autism RNs establish and maintain an interdisciplinary, multicenter research forum for scientific collaboration and infrastructure building. They provide national leadership in research to advance the evidence base on effective interventions for children and adolescents with autism and other developmental disabilities (autism/DD) across the lifespan. The Autism RC establishes research infrastructure and advances the evidence base on effective interventions, services, supports, and systems for children and adolescents with autism/DD. ​The Autism RNs develop guidelines for interventions and disseminate information as authorized by the Autism CARES Act of 2024 (P.L. 118-180) (Autism CARES Act). The Autism SIIP Program supports focused research on priority, emerging, and underdeveloped research areas in autism and other developmental disabilities (DD), with a special focus on the etiology of autism and transitions. The Autism FIRST Program supports research studies testing the implementation of new/innovative strategies that address critical issues surrounding the health of children and adolescents with autism. These studies collect primary data to analyze public health trends in their chosen area of focus within the autism research field. The Autism SDAR Program supports secondary data analysis of existing publicly available and accessible national databases and/or administrative records to determine the evidence-based practices for interventions that improve the physical and behavioral health of children and adolescents with autism/DD, with a particular focus on addressing barriers to identification, diagnosis, interventions and services among underserved populations and for whom there is limited evidence of the effectiveness of interventions, and limited access to screening, diagnosis, and treatment for autism/DD.

Mission Categories

Primary: Maternity, Infants, Children

Use of Funds

Allowed Uses

Training grants provide interdisciplinary training to health care and other professionals to screen, diagnose, refer, and provide services for children with autism and other developmental disabilities (autism/DD).

Research grants advance the knowledge base pertaining to autism/DDs, leading to improvements in interventions for children and adolescents with autism/DDs and improve the early identification and treatment for autism/DDs.

State demonstration grants improve outcomes, including quality of life and well-being, for youth with autism and their families/caregivers as the youth transition from child to adult serving systems.

Restrictions

Indirect costs that are allowed for administrative costs incurred as a result of training grants, are limited to 8 percent of direct costs.

Required Documentation

Applicants should review the individual HRSA notice of funding opportunity (NOFO) issued under this Assistance Listing for any required proof or certifications which must be submitted prior to or simultaneous with submission of an application package. 2 CFR 200, Subpart E - Cost Principles applies to this program.

Reporting & Compliance

Audit Required
Yes — Determined at Time of Award
Records Retention
3 years

Applicable 2 CFR 200 Subparts

  • Subpart B — General Provisions
  • Subpart C — Pre-Federal Award Requirements
  • Subpart D — Post-Federal Award Requirements
  • Subpart E — Cost Principles
  • Subpart F — Audit Requirements

Contacts

Eliza Heppner, Acting Associate Administrator for Maternal and Child Health
301-443-2170
5600 Fishers Lane , Rockville , MD 20857
Data from SAM.gov Federal Assistance Listings. Source published: 2026-01-08. Spec v2.0. Last synced: 2026-05-30 02:33:23.