SAMHSA Funding Available for Substance Abuse & HIV Prevention Navigator Programs for Racial/Ethnic Minority Young Men

Content From: AIDS.govPublished: March 29, 20172 min read

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The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) has announced funding available to support community-based organizations in providing services to those at highest risk for HIV and substance use disorders, especially racial/ethnic males ages 13-24 at risk for HIV/AIDS including males who have sex with other males (MSM).

The program will place a particular emphasis on those individuals who are not in stable housing in communities with high incidence and prevalence rates of substance misuse and HIV infection. It will provide opportunities to enhance outreach to the population of focus and assist them in receiving HIV medical care. The program proposes to use a navigation approach (Community Health Workers, Neighborhood Navigators, and Peer Support Specialists) to expedite services for these populations. Community-based organizations will be provided the opportunity to deliver comprehensive HIV/AIDS-related support services and transition assistance (substance misuse prevention and HIV medical care, housing, employment, family, education and prescription drug assistance services) that will reduce morbidity and mortality for this high-risk group.

Applicants must budget up to 10% of funds for HIV and hepatitis testing (grantees are expected to provide HIV and hepatitis testing, either onsite or through referral with a CLIA-certified organization.)Funding opportunity title: The Substance Abuse and HIV Prevention Navigator Program for Racial/Ethnic Minorities Ages 13-24 Cooperative Agreement

Anticipated Total Available Funding: $4,000,000

Awards: Up to 20 awards will be made at up to $200,000/year each for up to 5 years

Application due date: April 17, 2017

Information and application details: view the FOA and other details