Here’s a look at what the Trump administration’s decision to cut overhead funding for biomedical research means for ...
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) on Friday made a significant reduction in grants reserved for research institutions, a decision that may significantly impact American higher education.
“NIH spent more than $35 Billion in Fiscal Year 2023 on almost 50,000 competitive grants to more than 300,000 researchers at more than 2,500 universities, medical schools, and other research ...
On the second floor of The Laurelton, a school-turned-office building in Irondequoit, Rochester Clinical Research, or RCR, studies the effectiveness of various medical ...
A post on X from the agency regarding the change noted that, of the $35 billion NIH spent on research grants during the 2023 fiscal year, $9 billion went to indirect costs. The post noted that ...
“The United States should have the best medical research ... NIH’s high rate of funding for indirect costs helped subsidize the infrastructure necessary for their work — everything from a ...
The cuts for medical research are part of a broader push by the Trump administration and Elon Musk to reshape and reduce the size of the federal government. The NIH announced Friday it would cap ...
The move, announced Friday night by the National Institutes of Health, drastically cuts NIH’s funding for “indirect” costs related to research ... everything from a building’s heating ...
Of that amount, about $26 billion went to direct costs for research, while $9 billion was allocated to overhead through NIH’s indirect cost rate. As a justification for the decision, NIH pointed ...
The lawsuit, filed Monday in US District Court for Massachusetts, was co-led by Andrea Campbell and asserts that the Trump ...