The funding agency aims to cap “indirect costs” in biomedical research grants. But this behind-the-scenes work is crucial to making research happen.
On February 7, the NIH announced that it would begin capping indirect cost payments for new and existing research grants at 15%.
Of course the effects will vary across research institutions, as institutions differ markedly in their operating models and ...
The National Institutes of Health’s Office of the Director issued a policy change notice Feb. 7, announcing that the standard rate of indirect costs would be 15% for all current and future grants. The ...
UNC Charlotte received the most NIH funding in the area — $56 million since the 2015 fiscal year. The university received ...
On Friday, February 7, the National Institutes of Health (“NIH”) issued Policy Statement Supplemental Guidance affecting budgets both for ...
The state's life sciences industry, which generated $3.3 billion in economic activity in 2023, could be severely impacted by ...
As the lead of the Center for AIDS Research at UCSF, Dr. Monica Gandhi is spending the month in a world of devastating ...
Between Feb. 7-10, Edmund Murphy exercised his options, receiving a total of 69,835 shares at a cost per share of $35.62, and ...
The Centre has announced a Rs 10,000 crore investment in a new urea plant in Assam, set to complete in 3.5 years. This ...
Calling the cuts "arbitrary and capricious," 22 states sued the Trump administration Feb. 10 – the day they were set to take effect – with lawsuits following from the Associat ...
Georgia Life Sciences said that the immediate impact on university research would cause downstream harm to the biomedical industry in the state.