The Irvine H. Page, Junior Faculty Research Award is open to junior faculty investigators in arteriosclerosis and vascular biology who are members of the ATVB council (primary or secondary). The award recognizes investigators in the formative years of their faculty careers who have the potential to become future leaders in cardiovascular research.
The finalists will present their research results during a special session at the Vascular Discovery Scientific Sessions.
The applicant will be assessed on:
Honorees presenting in-person at the Vascular Discovery meeting will also be eligible for certain travel reimbursements.
The finalists will present their abstracts during an oral competition the Vascular Discovery Scientific Sessions. The winner will receive an engraved plaque and $1,000 to defray travel costs. Other finalists will each receive a plaque and a $500 travel stipend.
The applicant must:
1. Direct Relevance to Cardiovascular / Cerebrovascular / Vascular / Heart- or Circulation-related Disease or Physiology
The research question must be clearly tied to cardiovascular or related disease/biology (heart disease, stroke, vascular biology, risk factors, prevention, therapy, epidemiology, etc.).
Whether basic science, translational, clinical or public-health — the link to cardiovascular health must be explicit and central.
Predictor: Tight, explicit cardiovascular relevance — generic biomedical proposals rarely compete well.
2. Scientific Merit, Innovation & Potential to Advance the Field
Novel hypotheses, new therapeutic or diagnostic approaches, underexplored mechanisms, or prevention strategies tend to be highly valued.
Projects that promise to yield important insights into disease pathophysiology, risk factors, prevention, or new treatment strategies are prioritized.
Predictor: High innovation + potential for significant impact increases funding likelihood.
3. Feasible, Well-Designed Study with Realistic Aims & Methods
Given variability in grant size (some are modest seed grants, others larger), successful applications often have focused aims (2–4), a clear methodological plan, and a realistic timeline.
For clinical or population research: well-defined endpoints, appropriate sample size, statistical plan, and feasible recruitment/ follow-up.
For basic/translational research: robust design, appropriate models, controls, reproducibility plans, ethical compliance if human/animal subjects.
Predictor: Well-scoped, methodologically rigorous, feasible studies — rather than overly ambitious ones — tend to do best.
4. Investigator Credentials, Institutional Support & Resources (Especially for Early-Career/Fellowships)
For early-career investigators: mentorship, training environment, access to necessary infrastructure (labs, patient cohorts, imaging, data resources) is important.
For experienced investigators: previous record in cardiovascular research, publications, and proof of capacity to deliver.
Institutional commitment (protected time, core facilities, collaborative environment) gives reviewers confidence in feasibility.
Predictor: Strong team + institutional backing increases competitiveness.
5. Translational or Public Health Potential — Not Just Academic Interest
AHA values research that can lead to improved prevention, diagnostics, therapies, or population health impact, not just basic science.
Especially for clinical or epidemiologic proposals: potential for influence on practice, guidelines, public-health policy, or risk reduction.
Predictor: Clear path to translation or public health impact boosts an application's value.
6. Preliminary Data or Strong Rationale (When Required)
For more ambitious proposals, having pilot data or preliminary results helps — establishes feasibility and reduces risk.
For less data-heavy proposals (e.g., early-phase or exploratory studies), a strong rationale, literature support, and sound hypothesis may suffice — but logic must be tight.
Predictor: Demonstrated feasibility or well-supported rationale increases credibility.
7. Good Grant Writing — Clarity, Structure, Significance & Impact — + Realistic Budget
Well-structured aims, clear background & significance, logical methods, realistic budget, timeline, deliverables.
For smaller grants: budgets need to match project scope — no over-ambitious aims with limited funds.
Clear statement of impact — scientific, clinical, or public health.
Predictor: Strong narrative + realistic budgeting + clear impact improves chances substantially.
8. Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (Especially for Population/Clinical Research)
Given cardiovascular disease burden varies by demographic, proposals addressing health disparities, risk factors in underrepresented populations, or equitable access to care are often viewed favorably.
Inclusion of diverse populations and a plan for equitable recruitment/impact enhances public-health relevance.
Predictor: Focus on equity or underserved populations can strengthen proposals — especially for population-based or prevention studies.
9. Path Toward Future Funding, Translation or Long-Term Impact
Seed or pilot grants should ideally position the project for follow-on funding (bigger grants, multicenter studies, clinical trials) or real-world translation.
Reviewers often assess scalability and long-term benefit, not just immediate results.
Predictor: Projects that show a clear plan for growth or translation — beyond the initial funding — tend to fare better.
Vague cardiovascular link — proposals that are generic biomedical but without clear heart/vascular relevance
Overly ambitious aims relative to funding or resources, unrealistic timelines
Weak methodology, vague endpoints, poor feasibility, inadequate institutional support
Lack of translational or public-health relevance — purely descriptive without clear impact
Poor grant writing: unclear structure, weak significance statement, ill-justified budget
Begin with a clear cardiovascular-focused research question (disease, physiology, prevention or therapy)
Design a focused, realistic study (2–4 aims max, methods matched to resources, ethical plan if needed)
Ensure you have site/institutional support, mentorship (if early career), and resource access
Emphasize innovation and potential impact — scientific, clinical, or public health/ population health
If appropriate, address diversity and health equity, especially in population-based or prevention studies
Write a clear, structured, compelling proposal — background, significance, aims, methods, budget, impact
For seed-level grants: plan for future funding or translational steps — make your proposal a stepping stone
Budget realistically, and request only what is necessary to complete the aims
Sponsor Institute/Organizations: American Heart Association
Sponsor Type: Corporate/Non-Profit
Address: 7272 Greenville Ave. Dallas, TX 75231
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$1,000
Affiliation: American Heart Association
Address: 7272 Greenville Ave. Dallas, TX 75231
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