The impact of funding disruptions on large-scale teen pregnancy prevention research projects

Gina Gonzalez Hofert, Genevieve Martinez-Garcia, Lauren Tingey, Michele Ybarra, Ash Philliber, Jordan Karas, Melanie Grafals, Milagros Garrido, Sarah Parchem, Erin Yager-DeConcini

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

To advance the field of teen pregnancy prevention, new interventions must be developed and tested. The federal Teen Pregnancy Prevention program (TPP) funds the evaluation of promising interventions. We report on a funding disruption to 21 TPP Tier 2B research grantees across the US that was unusual for its ideological causation, sudden timing, severity, and ultimately court decisions compelling the agency to reverse the decision. We address the following question: How did challenges presented by the attempted funding termination impact grantees’ ability to continue with their intended research? Results from grantee surveys in 2019 demonstrate the funding disruption negatively impacted participant recruitment, organizational collaboration, program delivery, research rigor, and compromised grantees’ ability to complete high-quality evaluations. Results also show most projects could continue, with modified research goals, when funding was reinstated. We conclude administrations should avoid arbitrarily and prematurely terminating research projects. However, there is merit in reinstating funds to projects should a disruption occur. Results from this work are particularly relevant as we anticipate how health research projects may manage other disruptions to funding or timetables, such as those caused by COVID-19. Results are relevant to policy makers, researchers, government and private funders, grantees, and technical assistance teams.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number100101
JournalHealth Policy OPEN
Volume5
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 15 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Funding cuts
  • Research projects
  • Teen pregnancy prevention

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Health Policy

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