Definition of Research Performance Progress Report (RPPR) or Award Continuation
National Institutes of Health (NIH) requires recipients to submit a variety of reports which are due at specific times during the life cycle of a grant award. All reports must be accurate, complete, and submitted on time. NIH requires recipients to submit Research Performance Progress Reports (RPPR) through the eRA Commons at least annually as part of the non-competing continuation award process. The progress report must be approved by NIH to non-competitively fund each budget period within an approved project period. The RPPR asks recipients about accomplishments towards the goal of the project, plans for the next year of the project, manuscripts and publications produced, personnel who have worked on the project, changes to level of effort of key personnel on the project, actual or planned challenges or delays in the projects and plans for resolving them, significant changes regarding human or animal subjects, inclusion enrollment reports for clinical studies, and more. The terms and conditions of the award, which can be found by logging into the NIH eRA Commons, will specify what type of reports are required and specify due dates. Learn more about RPPRs.
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NIH Contacts for Questions
Sara Santos | School of Public Health and Health Sciences and other schools and colleges |
Rebecca Shafer | College of Natural Sciences |