Services
Expertises
Resources
Who we are

Healthcare Grants and Funding in Alberta for 2026

Alberta organizations can leverage provincial, federal, and philanthropic programs to advance healthcare projects, research, and community wellness. This directory explains health funding in Alberta, from Alberta Innovates and Alberta Health Services to CIHR and foundations. It is designed for clinics, hospitals, nonprofits, universities, municipalities, and Indigenous communities seeking clear guidance on grants and contributions.

150 programs available
  • Franco-Albertan Foundation (FFA) logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    Jeannine (Roy) and Émile Amyotte Fund

    Scholarship for French-language college health students
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Maximum amount : 3,000 $
    Eligible Industries
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    Types of eligible projects
    Alberta, Canada
  • Alberta Innovates logo
    Researchers And FacilitiesGrant and FundingClosed

    Life Science Fellowships

    Support for life science startup commercialization
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Maximum amount : 200,000 $
    Eligible Industries
    • Professional, scientific and technical services
    • Health care and social assistance
    Timeline
    • Closing date : January 30, 2021
    Alberta, Canada
  • Alberta Innovates logo
    Researchers And FacilitiesPartnering and CollaborationGrant and FundingClosed

    mCannabis

    Funding for cannabis-based pain research
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Maximum amount : 300,000 $
    Eligible Industries
    • Professional, scientific and technical services
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    • Public administration
    Timeline
    • Closing date : June 1, 2023
    Alberta, Canada
  • Alberta Innovates logo
    Researchers And FacilitiesPartnering and CollaborationGrant and FundingClosed

    mCannabis.RealWorld

    Real-world cannabis research funding for health innovation
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Maximum amount : 300,000 $
    Eligible Industries
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    Timeline
    • Closing date : June 1, 2023
    Alberta, Canada
  • Cumming School of Medicine (CSM) logo
    Other SupportResearchers And FacilitiesPartnering and CollaborationGrant and FundingClosed

    MDCH Graduate Awards (Community Health Sciences)

    Funding for Community Health Sciences graduate students
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Maximum amount : 1,500 $
    Eligible Industries
    • Health care and social assistance
    Types of eligible projects
    Commercialization
    Alberta, Canada
  • MEGlobal Canada ULC (ULC) logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    MEGlobal Canada Community Contributions Program

    Community funding for eligible Canadian organizations
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Varies by project
    Eligible Industries
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    • Public administration
    Types of eligible projects
    Environment and Climate
    Alberta, Canada
  • Myositis Canada (MYOCAN) logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    Myositis Canada — Research Funding

    Research support for myositis-related projects
    Alberta, NL, Ontario, Quebec, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Varies by project
    Eligible Industries
    • Health care and social assistance
    Types of eligible projects
    Alberta, NL, Ontario, Quebec, Canada
  • University of Calgary logo
    Researchers And FacilitiesGrant and FundingWage Subsidies And InternsClosed

    Neuroscience Summer Research Scholarships (NSRS)

    Partial salary support for neuroscience summer research
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • From $1,000 to $1,000
    Eligible Industries
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    Types of eligible projects
    Alberta, Canada
  • Eligible Funding
    • Maximum amount : 450,000 $
    Eligible Industries
    • Health care and social assistance
    Timeline
    • Open Date : December 10, 2025
    • Closing date : February 6, 2026
    Alberta, Canada
  • University of Calgary logo
    Researchers And FacilitiesGrant and FundingWage Subsidies And InternsClosed

    O'Brien Centre Summer Studentships (OCSS)

    Summer research support for undergraduate students
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Varies by project
    Eligible Industries
    • Health care and social assistance
    Timeline
    • Closing date : January 30, 2026
    Alberta, Canada
  • Fairview Health Complex Foundation logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    Pauline A. Landry Bursary

    $500 bursary for nursing students
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • From $500 to $500
    Eligible Industries
    • Health care and social assistance
    Types of eligible projects
    Alberta, Canada
  • SA Foundation logo
    Partnering and CollaborationGrant and FundingClosed

    SA Foundation — International Program Replication Grants

    Support for SA model replication abroad
    Alberta, BC, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Varies by project
    Eligible Industries
    • Health care and social assistance
    Types of eligible projects
    Human Resources
    Alberta, BC, Canada
  • Franco-Albertan Foundation (FFA) logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    Scholarships: Health and Sciences

    Scholarships for French-language post-secondary studies
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Maximum amount : 5,800 $
    Eligible Industries
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    Types of eligible projects
    Alberta, Canada
  • City of Cold Lake logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    Social Inclusion and Infrastructure Grant

    Funding for social inclusion projects in Cold Lake
    Cold Lake, Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Maximum amount : 100,000 $
    Eligible Industries
    • Health care and social assistance
    Types of eligible projects
    Construction and Renovation
    Cold Lake, Alberta, Canada
  • McCaig Institute for Bone and Joint Health logo
    Researchers And FacilitiesPartnering and CollaborationGrant and FundingClosed

    SPARC Ignite Grants

    Funding for new bone and joint health research collaborations
    Calgary, Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Maximum amount : 20,000 $
    Eligible Industries
    • Professional, scientific and technical services
    • Health care and social assistance
    Types of eligible projects
    Artificial Intelligence (AI)Innovation
    Calgary, Alberta, Canada
  • St. David's United Church Foundation of Calgary logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    St. David’s United Church Foundation of Calgary

    Funding for church outreach and major maintenance
    Calgary, Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Maximum amount : 5,000 $
    Eligible Industries
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    • Arts, entertainment and recreation
    • Other services (except public administration)
    Types of eligible projects
    Construction and Renovation
    Calgary, Alberta, Canada
  • Taber and District Health Foundation (TDHF) logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    Stewart Genes Scholarship

    Scholarship for African students at Sciences Po
    Grassy Lake, Taber, Vauxhall, Alberta
    Eligible Funding
    • From $500 to $500
    Eligible Industries
    • Health care and social assistance
    Types of eligible projects
    Grassy Lake, Taber, Vauxhall, Alberta
  • Government of Alberta logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    Supports for Newcomer Integration Grants

    Funding for newcomer integration projects in Alberta
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Varies by project
    Eligible Industries
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    • Other services (except public administration)
    Timeline
    • Closing date : January 4, 2022
    Alberta, Canada
  • The Calgary Chinook Fund logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    The Calgary Chinook Fund — Community Grants

    Ongoing support for Calgary 2SLGBTQIA+ organizations
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Maximum amount : 60,000 $
    Eligible Industries
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    • Arts, entertainment and recreation
    Types of eligible projects
    Alberta, Canada
  • The Melton Foundation logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    The Melton Foundation — General Funding

    Community funding for Alberta organizations
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Varies by project
    Eligible Industries
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    • Other services (except public administration)
    • Public administration
    Types of eligible projects
    Alberta, Canada
  • Fondation Lowe's Canada logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    The RONA Foundation - Build from the Heart

    Funding for community revitalization and housing access
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • From $50,000 to $300,000
    Eligible Industries
    • Health care and social assistance
    Timeline
    • Closing date : February 28, 2025
    Alberta, Canada
  • The Taylor Family Foundation (TFFF) logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    The Taylor Family Foundation Funding Program

    Funding for community wellbeing initiatives
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Maximum amount : 5,000,000 $
    Eligible Industries
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    • Arts, entertainment and recreation
    Types of eligible projects
    Alberta, Canada
  • Totem Charitable Foundation logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    Totem Charitable Foundation Grants

    Funding for Alberta charities
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Varies by project
    Eligible Industries
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    • Arts, entertainment and recreation
    Types of eligible projects
    Alberta, Canada
  • uniPHARM & Medicine Centre Pharmacies Charitable Foundation (UMC) logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    UMC Charity Grant Program

    Funding for registered Canadian charities and athletic associations
    Alberta, BC, Yukon, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Varies by project
    Eligible Industries
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    • Arts, entertainment and recreation
    Types of eligible projects
    Alberta, BC, Yukon, Canada
  • University of Calgary logo
    Researchers And FacilitiesGrant and FundingWage Subsidies And InternsClosed

    Undergraduate Research Summer Studentships

    Paid summer research opportunities for undergraduates
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • From $3,750 to $7,500
    Eligible Industries
    • Professional, scientific and technical services
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    Timeline
    • Closing date : January 30, 2026
    Alberta, Canada
  • University of Calgary logo
    Grant and FundingClosed

    Work-Integrated Learning (WIL) & Undergraduate Research Fund

    Funding for unpaid WIL and research course costs
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Maximum amount : 500 $
    Eligible Industries
    • Professional, scientific and technical services
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    Types of eligible projects
    Alberta, Canada
  • Government of Alberta logo
    Grant and FundingArchived

    Family and Community Support Services (FCSS) Program

    Supports Alberta communities through preventative social service initiatives
    Alberta, Canada
    Eligible Funding
    • Up to 80% of project cost
    Eligible Industries
    • Educational services
    • Health care and social assistance
    • Other services (except public administration)
    • Public administration
    Types of eligible projects
    Alberta, Canada

About this directory

What else should I know about Healthcare Grants and Funding in Alberta?

Why healthcare grants matter in Alberta

Healthcare grants and funding in Alberta help clinics, hospitals, nonprofits, and research institutions deliver better care, expand access, and modernize services. Organizations rely on non‑repayable funding to launch primary care initiatives, upgrade medical equipment, renovate facilities, and scale digital health solutions. In a province with diverse urban centres and vast rural and remote regions, targeted health funding supports equity, reduces wait times, and strengthens prevention. This directory covers healthcare grants Alberta applicants commonly seek, including Alberta Innovates health funding, Alberta Health Services grants, community health grants Alberta, and federal programs such as CIHR funding Alberta and PHAC public health support. It also explores mental health grants Alberta, Indigenous health funding Alberta, seniors care funding Alberta, and digital health funding Alberta for clinics and hospitals in Calgary, Edmonton, Red Deer, Lethbridge, Medicine Hat, Grande Prairie, and Wood Buffalo/Fort McMurray.

The funding landscape: Provincial, federal, and philanthropic

Alberta’s health funding ecosystem spans three layers. First, provincial streams include Alberta Health funding programs, Alberta Innovates health innovation grants, and opportunities to partner with Alberta Health Services (AHS) for pilots, procurement trials, and quality improvement microgrants. Second, federal programs allocate medical research funding Alberta through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), patient‑oriented research (SPOR) support, public health and prevention grants, and infrastructure funding via federal departments. Third, philanthropic and corporate grants such as MSI Foundation health grants Alberta, Calgary Foundation health grants, Edmonton Community Foundation health grants, United Way grants, and energy sector CSR funding complement government sources. Together, these mechanisms enable operating, capital, equipment, and innovation projects across community and acute care.

What types of healthcare funding exist in Alberta?

Healthcare funding in Alberta typically falls into four categories: non‑repayable grants (contributions, subsidies), capital funding for facilities and infrastructure, equipment grants for medical technology and digital tools, and innovation funding for pilots, clinical trials, knowledge translation, and commercialization. Organizations also encounter specialized streams for public health, mental health and addictions, continuing care, home care, and rural health. Many calls emphasize quality improvement, implementation science, and patient‑oriented research to ensure that evidence translates into practice. Applicants should align their proposals with provincial priorities such as primary care access, virtual care adoption, health equity, and Indigenous community wellness.

Capital funding and facility upgrades

Hospital grants Alberta and clinic renovation grants Alberta support modernization of emergency departments, diagnostic imaging suites, surgical spaces, and long‑term care environments. Health infrastructure funding Alberta and hospital capital funding opportunities Alberta may require cost‑share or matching funds. Projects often include HVAC and indoor air quality upgrades, infection prevention and control (IPC) improvements, accessibility retrofits, and security or cybersecurity in healthcare enhancements. Community health centres can explore accessibility upgrades funding for clinics Alberta and health facility accessibility grants Alberta to reduce barriers for persons with disabilities and seniors.

Equipment and technology funding

Health equipment grants Alberta and medical equipment grants for small hospitals Alberta enable acquisition of diagnostic devices, ultrasound, monitors, and laboratory instruments. Digital health funding Alberta supports EMR upgrade grants for Alberta clinics, telemedicine equipment grants Alberta, and virtual care grants that improve remote access. Programs increasingly fund health data/AI funding Alberta, cybersecurity funding for healthcare organizations Alberta, and interoperability initiatives that enhance care coordination. Simulation lab funding Alberta universities and clinical training centres helps build workforce capacity.

Innovation, digital health, and commercialization

Alberta Innovates health funding and health innovation funding Alberta back pilots, proof‑of‑concept projects, and procurement pilots with AHS innovation funding. Digital health pilots Alberta, telehealth grants Alberta, and virtual care adoption grants for physicians Alberta accelerate integration of eHealth into daily practice. Health tech startup grants Alberta and medtech commercialization funding Alberta support the path from prototype to market, with opportunities for procurement/innovation in AHS funding to validate solutions in real settings. Knowledge translation funding health and implementation science grants Alberta help teams scale proven models across primary care networks and hospitals.

Operating and program funding

Community health grants Alberta, mental wellness grants Alberta, and preventive health grants Alberta provide operating support for programs addressing chronic disease management, diabetes prevention, cardiovascular health, cancer patient services, and palliative and end‑of‑life care. Nonprofit health grants Alberta can fund outreach, navigation, and health literacy initiatives. Workplace wellness grants Alberta employers and occupational health grants Alberta strengthen prevention in businesses and municipalities, while school health grants Alberta and school nutrition program funding Alberta benefit children and youth.

Sector‑specific priorities and opportunities

Primary care and family medicine

Primary care clinic grants Alberta and family medicine clinic funding Alberta help practices expand hours, hire nurse practitioners, and integrate allied health. Rural and remote clinic funding Alberta, mobile clinic funding Alberta rural, and travel and accommodation health funding Alberta address access gaps. Quality improvement grants support EMR optimization, panel management, and chronic disease pathways.

Rural health and emergency services

Rural health grants Alberta and EMS/paramedic grants Alberta fund community paramedicine, mobile diagnostic services, and emergency preparedness. Health emergency preparedness grants Alberta and pandemic preparedness funding Alberta strengthen surge capacity, training, and stockpiles. Investments may cover telecommunications for telemedicine, generators, and water quality improvement funding for health centers Alberta.

Indigenous and northern health

Indigenous health funding Alberta supports First Nations and Métis health priorities, including Indigenous community wellness grants Alberta, Indigenous maternal health funding Alberta, and Indigenous harm reduction funding Alberta. Programs may finance cultural safety training, land‑based healing, health equity grants Alberta, and mobile mental health unit grants Alberta. Organizations should collaborate with community leadership and align with self‑determined goals.

Mental health and addictions

Mental health grants Alberta and addictions treatment funding opportunities Alberta strengthen counselling, youth mental health grants Calgary and area, and opioid response grants Alberta. Harm reduction funding Alberta may support overdose prevention site funding Alberta, harm reduction supplies grant Alberta, and harm reduction outreach van grants Alberta. Tele‑mental health program grants Alberta expand access for rural and remote communities.

Seniors care, long‑term care, and home care

Seniors care funding Alberta and long‑term care grants Alberta fund continuing care modernization, dementia‑friendly design, and infection control grants for long‑term care Alberta. Long‑term care facility upgrades Alberta, seniors housing with care grants Alberta, and home care funding Alberta improve safety and independence. Palliative care grants Alberta and palliative home care funding grants Alberta bolster end‑of‑life supports.

Public health, prevention, and environmental health

Public health grants Alberta cover vaccination outreach, chronic disease prevention, and healthy living/fitness grants Alberta. Environmental health grants Alberta include clean air/indoor air quality grants Alberta and water quality/boil water advisory support grants Alberta. Programs may target immigrant and refugee health grants Alberta, disability health funding Alberta, and health literacy grants Alberta.

Research, training, and clinical trials

Medical research funding Alberta flows through CIHR funding Alberta, University of Alberta and University of Calgary programs, research chairs health Alberta, and biomedical research grants Alberta. Trainee graduate student health funding Alberta, postdoc health fellowships Alberta, and clinical trials funding Alberta support the pipeline of talent. Translational research grants Alberta, precision health grants Alberta, genomics health funding Alberta researchers, and patient‑oriented research SPOR support Alberta advance discovery to practice. Knowledge translation funding health projects Alberta and quality improvement microgrants AHS Alberta bridge the last mile.

Regional and municipal considerations across Alberta

City‑specific opportunities appear frequently. Community health project grants Edmonton and Calgary Foundation health grants can resource local projects. Smaller centres—Red Deer, Lethbridge, Medicine Hat, Grande Prairie, Airdrie, Okotoks, Banff, Canmore, St. Albert, Sherwood Park, and Wood Buffalo/Fort McMurray—often access rural municipality community wellness grants Alberta and corporate community investment health grants Alberta. Applicants should monitor community grant deadlines Alberta health and coordinate matching funds health grants Alberta with municipal budgets or philanthropic partners.

Eligibility criteria: Who can apply?

Eligibility criteria health grants Alberta vary by program but commonly include nonprofits and charities, Indigenous governments and organizations, municipalities and rural health authorities, primary care networks, clinics and hospitals, universities and research institutes, and social enterprises aligned with public benefit. Businesses in medtech or digital health may be eligible for innovation funding and commercialization support. Many programs require operations or impact in Alberta, a clear community benefit, and compliance with privacy, ethics, and IPC standards. French‑language health services funding Alberta and grants for bilingual health programs Alberta may support minority language access where relevant.

How to apply for healthcare grants in Alberta

The process follows consistent steps:
1) Define the problem and outcomes using data from your clinic, hospital, or community.
2) Map funders: Alberta Innovates health grant application guide, AHS partnership funding opportunities for innovation, CIHR grants available to Alberta researchers, and local foundations.
3) Confirm admissibility: eligibility criteria, geographic scope, program priorities, and matching requirements.
4) Build a workplan with milestones, risk mitigation, and evaluation indicators aligned to reporting requirements Alberta health funding.
5) Prepare a budget justification for health grants Alberta, including cost‑share, in‑kind, and cash contributions.
6) Compile letters of support from partners, Indigenous leadership where applicable, and patient advisors for POR.
7) Submit online by the grant deadline (intake dates) and track deliverables.

Budgeting, matching funds, and cost‑share

Matching funds health grants Alberta can range from 10% to 50% depending on program. Cost‑share health funding Alberta often includes municipal support, philanthropic grants, or corporate CSR investments. Some programs offer microgrants health Alberta for pilots, while larger capital grants require evidence of sustainability and lifecycle costing. Applicants should clearly separate capital, operating, and evaluation expenses and detail procurement plans, especially for medical equipment and technology.

Compliance, ethics, and reporting

Programs require ethics approvals for research, privacy and cybersecurity compliance for EMR and digital health, and health equity impact assessments where relevant. Grant reporting should track outputs (patients served, equipment installed), outcomes (reduced wait times, improved adherence), and knowledge translation (training, publications, toolkits). Many health program grants require quarterly progress reports and a final outcomes report with lessons learned and implementation guidance.

Timelines, deadlines, and planning

Grant deadline schedules vary by funder. Alberta Innovates health innovation intakes, CIHR cycles, and foundation calls typically publish intake dates several times per year. Applicants should create a calendar covering list of open healthcare grants Alberta November–December 2026 and anticipated 2026 windows, with internal buffers for letters, quotes, and partner approvals. Where possible, run small pre‑pilots to generate data for larger submissions.

Common pitfalls and how to avoid them

Frequent challenges include unclear eligibility, under‑scoped budgets, missing letters of support, and insufficient evaluation plans. In digital health proposals, interoperability and cybersecurity are often underdeveloped; prioritize EMR standards, privacy impact assessments, and business continuity. For rural health grants Alberta, demonstrate workforce feasibility (physician recruitment incentives Alberta, nursing education grants Alberta) and travel logistics. In Indigenous health funding Alberta, center community governance and cultural safety, with adequate resourcing for Elders and knowledge keepers.

Inclusive access: Small, large, and nonprofit applicants

This directory serves organizations of all sizes. Small community clinics can pursue microgrants, telemedicine equipment grants Alberta, and quality improvement funding. Large hospitals can combine capital and equipment grants with implementation science funding to scale best practices. Nonprofit health grants Alberta can underwrite navigation, mental health counselling grants Alberta, and immigrant and refugee health grants Alberta. Universities and research hospitals can align CIHR, SPOR, and foundation support with clinical trials seed funding Alberta.

City and regional examples to guide your search

- Calgary and area: youth mental health grants Calgary and area, Calgary Foundation health project grants how to apply, and corporate community investment from health‑focused partners.
- Edmonton inner city: Edmonton Community Foundation health grants eligibility and community‑based research grants Alberta for harm reduction and housing‑linked supports.
- Red Deer and Central Alberta: rural and remote clinic funding Alberta, EMS community paramedicine grant Alberta, and accessibility upgrades funding for clinics Alberta.
- Lethbridge and Medicine Hat: healthy schools grant Alberta mental health, school nutrition program funding Alberta, and diabetes prevention program grants Alberta.
- Grande Prairie and Peace Country: mobile medical clinic funding Alberta rural and telehealth equipment grants for clinics Alberta apply to reach dispersed populations.
- Wood Buffalo/Fort McMurray: environmental health and air quality initiatives, emergency preparedness grants for hospitals Alberta, and workplace wellness grant Alberta employers.

Proposal quality: What reviewers look for

Strong proposals align with policy goals (primary care access, mental health and addictions, Indigenous health, seniors and continuing care, digital health). They quantify need, show patient and community engagement, and specify measurable outcomes and evaluation plans. Budgets must be credible, with vendor quotes for medical equipment and clear maintenance plans. For medtech, outline commercialization and procurement pathways, and for research, describe knowledge translation and implementation across Alberta Health Services sites.

Using data, equity, and evaluation frameworks

Grantors favour proposals that integrate equity (age, gender, disability, rurality, newcomer status), collect baseline metrics, and apply validated tools. Implementation science frameworks can guide scaling and sustainability, while quality improvement methods (PDSA cycles) track rapid learning. For public health grants Alberta, show how interventions address determinants of health and include multilingual outreach; French‑language health services funding Alberta and grants for bilingual health programs Alberta can expand access.

How helloDarwin helps organizations navigate funding

helloDarwin simplifies access to non‑dilutive financing by combining consulting expertise with a SaaS platform that maps programs to project needs. Organizations use our guided intake to surface healthcare grants Alberta, confirm eligibility, and structure applications. Our experts help with timelines, matching funds strategies, and documentation, while the platform centralizes deadlines, tasks, and reporting. This hybrid model supports clinics, hospitals, nonprofits, municipalities, and research teams across Alberta seeking grants for digital health, equipment, capital upgrades, community programs, and research.

Key takeaways and next steps

- Alberta’s health funding ecosystem spans provincial, federal, and philanthropic sources.
- Priority areas include primary care, rural access, Indigenous health, mental health and addictions, seniors care, digital health, and public health.
- Prepare early, engage partners, and align proposals with program priorities and evaluation requirements.
- Use a structured approach to eligibility, budgeting, and reporting to improve success.
- Consider a hybrid support model to streamline discovery, application, and tracking of healthcare grants in Alberta.