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 Friday, February 7, the National Institutes of Health (“NIH”) issued Policy Statement Supplemental Guidance affecting budgets both for ...
Over the past few weeks, the Trump administration has introduced sweeping changes across the federal government that have impacted the federal ...
In statements and interviews with The Crimson, nine life sciences researchers at Harvard — from the Harvard School of Public ...
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 ...
On February 7, the NIH announced that it would begin capping indirect cost payments for new and existing research grants at 15%.
Until you’re wheeled into an ER, relying on a medical system built by decades of taxpayer-funded research. What happens next — the drugs you’re given, the treatments available, the standards of care ...
"Without careful consideration of the impact of these changes, we risk long-term damage" to medical research, writes Dr. .
Notably, indirect costs from grants do not cover the full cost of carrying out research at universities. In 2023, colleges and universities contributed approximately $27 billion of their own funding, ...
The administration announced late last week a new cap that would cut billions of research cost funding provided by the ...
The order was temporarily blocked after Massachusetts and 21 other states filed a lawsuit opposing the NIH funding cuts.