grant

Empowering Support Persons to Enhance the Recovery Capital of Postpartum Women with Opioid Use Disorder

Organization FRIENDS RESEARCH INSTITUTE, INC.Location BALTIMORE, UNITED STATESPosted 1 Apr 2026Deadline 31 Mar 2027
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY20260-4 weeks oldAddressCapitalCaringChild WelfareClinical TrialsCollaborationsCommunicationCommunitiesComplexDataDevelopmentEducationEducational aspectsEmotionalFaceFamilyFamily memberFearFeedbackFosteringFoundationsFriendsFrightGoalsHealth Care ProvidersHealth PersonnelHospitalsIndividualInterventionJudgmentKnowledgeLife CycleLife Cycle StagesLived experienceLived experiencesMeasuresMorbidityMothersMotivationNewborn InfantNewbornsOpiatesOpioidOutcomeParentsParticipantPatientsPersonsPhasePlayPost-partum WomenPostpartum PeriodPostpartum WomenProcessPublic HealthRandomization trialRandomized, Controlled TrialsRecoveryRecovery SupportResearchResearch DesignResearch ResourcesResourcesRoleSelf EfficacyServicesSiteSocial NetworkSourceStudy TypeTechniquesTrainingTraining ProgramsTraining SupportTreatment outcomeVulnerable PopulationsWomanacceptability and feasibilityadolescent welfareassess effectivenesscare as usualcare coordinationcare resourcescare servicescare systemschild well beingchild wellbeingcoordinating carecost effectivedesigndesigningdetermine effectivenessdevelopmentaleffectiveness assessmenteffectiveness evaluationemotional distressempowermentevaluate effectivenessexamine effectivenessfacesfacialfeeling distressfeeling upsethealth assessmenthealth care personnelhealth care resourceshealth care workerhealth providerhealth staffhealth workershealth workforcehealthcare employeeshealthcare staffhealthcare workforcehigh riskhospital carehuman capitalimprovedinnovateinnovationinnovativeintervention designintervention effectlife courseloved onesmedical care providersmedical personnelmortalitymotivational enhancement therapymotivational interviewnewborn childnewborn childrenopiate use disorderopioid agonist therapyopioid agonist treatmentopioid use disorderoverdose riskparentpatient navigationpatient navigatorpilot testpost-partumpreventpreventingprimary outcomerandomized control trialrandomized trialrandomized, clinical trialssecondary outcomeskillssocialsocial attachmentsocial bondingsocial capitalsocial factorssocial rolestandard carestandard treatmentstructural determinantsstructural factorsstudy designsubstance usesubstance usingtheoriestherapy designtooltreatment as usualtreatment designtreatment providerusual carevulnerable groupvulnerable individualvulnerable people
Sign up free to applyApply link · pipeline · email alerts
— or —

Get email alerts for similar roles

Weekly digest · no password needed · unsubscribe any time

Full Description

Project Summary/Abstract
Opioid agonist treatment (OAT) is highly effective in preventing morbidity and mortality related to opioid use

disorder (OUD), but long-term engagement is complicated by physical, social, and structural factors, especially

for women. Postpartum women with OUD face the challenging transition from hospital care to the community,

both for themselves and their newborns. Fear of judgment from healthcare providers may discourage women

from asking for help or accessing necessary support services. The presence of supportive individuals—such

as family or friends—can increase recovery capital; however, support people may require additional education

and skills to effectively assist their loved ones, representing a critical gap in their ability to influence treatment

outcomes. Theory-based, evidence-supported Patient Navigation (PN) interventions improve OAT engagement

by addressing social, structural, and internal barriers (e.g. mistrust) using motivational techniques and

providing tangible resources. This study aims to leverage the strengths of both PN and supportive family or

friend involvement to enhance recovery capital and, secondarily, improve retention in community-based OAT.

We hypothesize that training and engaging support persons will promote recovery capital by targeting social

capital (by fostering stronger relationships), human capital (through increasing self-efficacy), and cultural

capital (by promoting norms and values that support recovery). This project aligns with the objectives of RFA-

DA-26-024, which emphasizes innovative strategies to improve care transitions and enhance recovery capital.

The proposed study is a randomized controlled trial of a PN intervention called Supporting Treatment for

Opioids and Recovery Capital (STORC) that blends PN with an added component designed to enhance

recovery capital for postpartum women through additional training for chosen support persons. This

intervention will provide patients with care coordination and resource referrals, and will provide support

persons with comprehensive tools, including knowledge about OUD treatment, effective communication

strategies, and emotional support. Patient navigation, combined with targeted training for support persons,

equips family and friends with the skills and knowledge to offer more effective, impactful support for their loved

ones in recovery. This project is significant to public health because it employs a recovery capital framework to

explore how support persons can play a critical role in the recovery efforts of new mothers at high risk of

overdose.

Grant Number: 1R61DA064704-01
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Karen Alexander

Sign up free to get the apply link, save to pipeline, and set email alerts.

Sign up free →

Agency Plan

7-day free trial

Unlock procurement & grants

Upgrade to access active tenders from World Bank, UNDP, ADB and more — with email alerts and pipeline tracking.

$29.99 / month

  • 🔔Email alerts for new matching tenders
  • 🗂️Track tenders in your pipeline
  • 💰Filter by contract value
  • 📥Export results to CSV
  • 📌Save searches with one click
Start 7-day free trial →