You have mastered the foundations of research, and now it’s time to transform your research idea into a tangible, shareable document: the Concept Paper. This paper serves as a miniature protocol and is the crucial first step for obtaining peer review, faculty guidance, and funding.
1. Why a One-Page Concept Paper?
The concept paper is deliberately kept brief (ideally one page) for practical reasons:
- Time Efficiency: It respects the precious time of your faculty, guides, and funding reviewers.
- Focus: It forces you to be focused and succinct, highlighting only the most essential elements.
- Overcoming Inhibition: Writing a single page is easier than drafting a full protocol, helping your research ideas get born rather than aborted.
2. Structure of the Concept Paper (The Six Essential Sections)
A concept paper is structured similarly to a full protocol, covering all key areas in a bulleted format.
A. Background and Justification (3 Bullets)
- Importance of the Study Problem: Quantify the problem and provide linked references.
- Knowns and Unknowns (Literature & Local Context): State what current literature/local data shows and, critically, what information is missing.
- Information Needed: State exactly what information your study will provide to address the problem effectively.
B. Statement of Objectives (2-3 Objectives)
- State objectives quantitatively.
- Clearly indicate the Primary Objective (the main goal) and Secondary Objectives.
- Specify whether the objective is to estimate a quantity (descriptive) or to test a hypothesis (analytical).
C. Methods (Elaborate Section)
This section outlines the plan:
- Study Design: (e.g., Survey, Case-Control, Cohort, RCT).
- Study Population: Who will be included.
- Key Operational Definitions: Provide only the most essential definitions (referencing standard literature criteria).
- Sampling Methodology: Briefly state the selection strategy (e.g., random sampling, convenience sampling).
- Sample Size: Briefly mention the calculated sample size and the key assumptions used for its calculation.
- Data Collection: Who collects, what is collected, within what time frame, and key quality assurance measures.
- Analysis Plan: Summarize the type of analysis based on the primary and secondary objectives.
- Human Subject Protection: Key measures taken and which Ethics Committee will review the protocol.
D. Expected Benefits (Action and Future Agenda)
- Actionable Results: What specific action will be taken immediately following the results (e.g., policy change, intervention refinement)?
- Future Agenda: What future research or planning agenda will result from these findings?
E. Key References (Maximum 5)
- Must follow internationally acceptable standard guidelines for writing references (e.g., ICMJE guidelines).
F. Budget (Indicative)
- A brief, indicative budget covering key items like salaries/per diem, travel, equipment/supplies, and miscellaneous costs. This shows funding agencies you have considered the logistics.
3. Template Considerations (Observational vs. Interventional)
While the general structure is similar, the Methods section must be tailored to the study type:
| Section | Observational Study Concept Paper | Interventional Study Concept Paper (e.g., RCT) |
| Guidelines | General guidance (e.g., EQUATOR Network tips). | Specific guidelines for trials (e.g., SPIRIT). |
| Objectives | May focus on estimating prevalence/incidence or identifying risk factors. | Primary objective focuses on the Primary Outcome (efficacy/safety). |
| Method: Intervention | Not applicable. | Must explicitly state the intervention (drug/dosage/frequency/nature) and the comparator. |
| Method: Randomization | Not applicable. | Must briefly mention Randomization Sequence Generation, Allocation Concealment, and Masking (level and type). |
4. Practical Application (ICMR Example)
Major funding agencies often use formats very similar to this generic concept paper:
- ICMR Pre-Proposal Format: Asks for Title, Introduction, Novelty, Applicability, and Project Description, often with specific word counts. This confirms the value of preparing a short, focused document as a first step.
- STS Proposals (for undergraduates): Requires Title, Introduction, Objectives, Methodology, Implications (similar to Expected Benefits), and References—closely matching the generic template.
Making a habit of writing a ready, succinct concept paper is essential for organizing your ideas and capitalizing on research funding opportunities.

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