Muhammad Umer Bughio Trust supports high-quality, ethical, and impact-oriented research as a core component of evidence-based healthcare.
The Research Grant Awards Program aims to:
Years of Experience
Years of Experience
Proposals are invited in, but not limited to, the following domains:
Interdisciplinary and implementation-focused projects are encouraged.
Applications are welcome from:
Physicians, clinicians, and healthcare professionals
Faculty members and academic researchers
Early-career investigators and postgraduate researchers
Independent researchers with relevant expertise
Applicants must demonstrate the capacity to conduct the proposed research. Institutional affiliation is preferred but not mandatory.
Funding & Support
The Research Grant Awards Program operates under a structured governance framework that separates administrative oversight, scientific evaluation, and ethical review.
Key features include:
Committee composition may vary by funding cycle to ensure subject-area relevance.
All funded research must:
Grant Cycle (2025)
Interested applicants should submit their complete application by email.
Please review the Call for Proposals and Submission Guidelines before applying.
All required documents should be compiled into a single email submission.
Applications should be sent to: info@mud.org
This section explains how research proposals are assessed under the Research Grant Awards Program. All applications are evaluated using clear, consistent criteria aligned with international best practices in research funding and peer review.
All eligible proposals are reviewed independently using the same guiding principles:
Every application is judged on what is proposed, not who is proposing it.
Each proposal is assessed by qualified subject-matter experts using a numeric scoring scale adapted from internationally recognized funding models. Proposals are evaluated using a seven-point numeric scoring scale, with lower scores indicating stronger proposals. Funding recommendations are based on the overall balance of strengths and limitations across all evaluation criteria, rather than on any single score in isolation.