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The NIH Progress Report

The NIH Progress Report. SNAP to RPPR – What does it mean? Sponsored Projects Services May 1, 2013. What does this mean?. For SNAP awards with start dates on/after JULY 1, 2013 (i.e., due dates on/after May 15, 2013 )

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The NIH Progress Report

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  1. The NIH Progress Report SNAP to RPPR – What does it mean? Sponsored Projects Services May 1, 2013

  2. What does this mean? • For SNAP awards with start dates on/after JULY 1, 2013 (i.e., due dates on/after May 15, 2013) • Use of the Research Performance Progress Report (RPPR) module is required – replaces eSNAP • RPPR module is in Commons • Requests for additional RPPR materials from I/C • Non-SNAP award progress reports stay the same for now

  3. Progress Report Additional Materials (PRAM) • Starting in April, added ability for I/C to request additional materials/clarification on RPPR • Electronically enter, review, submit information in response to requests • Respond to auto-email about non-compliant publications • PRAM is not mandatory (yet)

  4. Public Access Policy • In place since 2008 (PubMed citation) • Has been in HHS appropriation language since 2009 (not going away!) • For awards with budget start of 7/1/13: NOA will be held if publications are not in compliance • MyNCBI entry of publications – NOT RPPR • http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/utils/pacm/ (more info from SPS to come…)

  5. RPPR vs. eSNAP • The similarities: • Substance and form not that different • Information pre-populates from NIH systems • Publications from PI’s MyNCBI account • No budget detail required for SNAP • Final progress report is the same • Non-SNAP awards remain the same

  6. RPPR vs. eSNAP Separate Pages/Screens for the following sections: • Cover Page • Accomplishmennts • Products • Participants • Impact • Changes • Special (NIH) Reporting Requirements • Budget – SF424 R&R Forms (for non-SNAP)

  7. RPPR vs. eSNAP • Format is different – check boxes, text, PDF upload • “Nothing to report” • New information: • Foreign Component information • Dollars spent in foreign countries • Organizational affiliation of personnel at foreign sites

  8. RPPR vs. eSNAP • Effort on All Personnel rounded to nearest whole month • Location to report on competitive revisions/admin supplements • Public Access compliance status • Other support only if there is a change • Link to NOA • Streamlined reporting of ClinicalTrials.gov info

  9. RPPR is coming to an agency near you… • NSF: Now, via Research.gov • NIH: Very Soon for SNAP awards, and later for non-SNAP • Other agency timelines: http://www.nsf.gov/bfa/dias/policy/rppr/

  10. Helpful Links • NIH RPPR Page: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/rppr/index.htm • NIH Public Access Policy: http://publicaccess.nih.gov/ • Search for report due dates: http://era.nih.gov/commons/quick_queries/index.cfm#progress

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