NIH, Federal and research funding

In statements and interviews with The Crimson, nine life sciences researchers at Harvard said limits on indirect cost ...
Earlier this month, the Trump administration directed the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to impose limits on specific ...
A federal judge on Friday further delayed proposed cuts at the National Institutes of Health, which scientists warn would slash grant money for important medical research, including work being done at ...
The Trump administration is exploiting a loophole to keep a funding freeze in place, leaving researchers in limbo.
The NIH, the largest funder of biomedical research in the U.S., will limit funding for indirect costs to 15%. Indirect costs cover expenses like building maintenance and administrative salaries.
The move would reduce the share of NIH grants paid to “indirect” costs—lab upkeep, administration and operation—to 15 percent, cutting their historical rate almost in half, overnight.
The NIH announcement set the rate at 15 percent for every campus. The new rate would start today and apply retroactively to ...
The NIH said it is cutting medical research funding that universities use to pay for overhead costs. The move sparked concern at the University of California, which receives billions in annual ...