Toggle navigation
Home
Search
Services
Blog
Contact
About
SC Share
Steadman, Sandra S.
South Carolina Share, West Columbia, SC, United States
Search 4 grants from Sandra Steadman
Search grants from South Carolina Share
Share this grant:
:
:
Abstract
Funding
Institution
Related projects
Comments
Recent in Grantomics:
Your institution
vs. funders. Who wins?
Read more...
How should you pick the next fundable research topic?
Read more...
Recently viewed grants:
Intravenous MitoTargeted AAV9 Gene Therapy for Treatment of Visual Loss and Encephalopathy in Leigh Syndrome and NARP
Center for Integrative Biomedical Computing
Web-Based Weight Loss &Weight Maintenance for Older Rural Women
Project 1: Use of Composition and Combinatorial ENM Libraries for Mechanistic In
Prevention of Young Adult Drug Use in Club Settings
Recently added grants:
Percutaneous Left Ventricular Unloading for Cardiogenic Shock: Beyond Acute Hemodynamic Support
Dissecting the role of vasopressin in regulating the critical period for social reward learning
Therapeutic Potential of ALK1 Activating Drugs in HHT Models
Birc5 as a regulator of NK cell development and immune function
Clinical and Metabolic Signature of Recovered Myocardium in Human Heart Failure
Abstract
Funding Agency
Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Center for Mental Health Services (CMHS)
Type
Mental Health and/or Substance Abuse Services Grants (H79)
Project #
1H79SM060744-01
Application #
8517409
Study Section
Earmark (ZOA1)
Program Officer
Blake, Mary
Project Start
2012-09-30
Project End
2015-09-29
Budget Start
2012-09-30
Budget End
2013-09-29
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2012
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Institution
Name
South Carolina Share
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
West Columbia
State
SC
Country
United States
Zip Code
29169
Related projects
NIH 2014
H79 SM
SC Share
Steadman, Sandra S. / South Carolina Share
NIH 2013
H79 SM
SC Share
Steadman, Sandra S. / South Carolina Share
NIH 2012
H79 SM
SC Share
Steadman, Sandra S. / South Carolina Share
Comments
Be the first to comment on Sandra Steadman's grant