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%.
"Without careful consideration of the impact of these changes, we risk long-term damage" to medical research, writes Dr. George Weiner.
People often see this as administrative bloat. It is a reimbursement for costs already incurred by universities to support the research infrastructure at the university. And people don’t necessarily ...
The sudden policy change is that the NIH is to cap indirect cost recovery at 15 percent of the direct costs of a grant, ...
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NIH funding cuts would mean universities would have to find ways to make cutbacks and could result in “massive layoffs” ...
The Trump administration’s cuts to university research grants will make America sicker and poorer in the long run.
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