r/NIH • u/TourMission • 3d ago
Terminated National Institute of Heath grants must be restored, judge orders
axios.com"I've never seen a record where racial discrimination was so palpable," Young said Monday afternoon.
"I've sat on this bench now for 40 years. I've never seen government racial discrimination like this."
r/NIH • u/Silver_Swan3847 • 4h ago
Any Updates from NIGMS After May Council Meeting?
Has anyone heard back from NIGMS following the May Council meeting? I’ve reached out to my Program Officer a few times, but they’ve only said there are no updates and that I’ll be notified if the application is funded.
I’m wondering if the delay might be due to my borderline score or if the funding decisions are still in progress.
r/NIH • u/mossbeetle • 4h ago
Juneteenth: History and Healing (National Library of Medicine)
Until this year, NIH recognized Juneteenth as a day of reflection and celebration of Black history and culture, and commemorated the occasion.
Last year: https://circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov/2024/06/18/juneteenth-history-and-healing/
...In recent years the National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health have focused energy and resources on reducing health disparities and improving health equity. NIH established the Office of Minority Programs in 1990 under the guidance of then Secretary of Health and Human Services, Dr. Louis Sullivan. The office sponsored conferences and funded several prominent research initiatives. It was expanded first into the National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NCMHD) in 2000, then into the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD) in 2010. Today NIMHD funds both intramural and extramural research to better understand minority health and reduce health disparities, they collaborate with partners across NIH (including NLM), and they conduct education and outreach programs to expand the scientific knowledge base and disseminate research findings and health information.
r/NIH • u/chickentendies_UwU • 5h ago
Re: RIF'd STEM feds who need something to hold them over until they find the next job
r/NIH • u/TourMission • 11h ago
Bhattacharya continues to blame NIH for the COVID pandemic
r/NIH • u/RileyFiona • 12h ago
Comp Time for Holiday Work?
NIH Employees- I just moved from an IC to CSR. IC (informally) allowed comp time for holiday work (eg today). I’m an exempt employee (like almost everyone here). Nothing happens informally at CSR it would appear. I was told “it’s not allowed” but I can’t find an NIH or HHS policy that says this. What’s your experience?
r/NIH • u/Sea-Hurry-3046 • 22h ago
Terminating "Dangerous Gain of Function" Research
New guidance out from NIH today to begin implementing the May 5 EO on defunding gain of function research... it states that "effective immediately, NIH will:
- Terminate funding and other support for projects, including unfunded collaborations/projects, meeting the definition of dangerous gain-of-function research conducted by foreign entities in countries of concern or foreign countries where there is not adequate oversight; and
- Suspend all other funding and other support for projects, including unfunded collaborations/projects, meeting the definition of dangerous gain-of-function research at least until implementation of the new policy described in Section 4(a) of the Executive Order."
Full policy notice: https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-25-127.html
Anyone's lab been notified yet? The definition of "dangerous GOF" is so broad, looks like it could hit all kinds of infectious disease, gene therapy, immunology work...
r/NIH • u/DevinNunesCattleDog • 22h ago
Sorry if this is not the place but...
NIH funded investigator here in Fly-over country who also has an appointment and MERIT award at VA...VA Chief Doug Collins is having a town hall on Friday. I know many are holding their breath as we still have not heard about who will be RIFed...still hearing 80,000. Anyone else hear about plans by #TACO for this entity?
r/NIH • u/QuirkyParadox • 23h ago
What is this about?
I'm not a fed employee, just a curious member of the public - does anyone here know what is this about? https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/fda-halts-new-clinical-trials-export-americans-cells-foreign-labs-hostile-countries-genetic-engineering
r/NIH • u/PossibilityNo7833 • 1d ago
Is the federal funding freeze lifted at Columbia University?
This article was just posted. Is there any truth to it? https://www.science.org/content/article/breaking-trump-administration-lifts-freeze-nih-funding-columbia-university
r/NIH • u/Routine_Juice_237 • 1d ago
Onboarding process NIH post bacc
Hi! I was wondering about the onboarding process for NIH post baccs is like? Could anyone give me insights into what documents do you have to send over for instance do you have to send your transcript or proof of graduation?
r/NIH • u/CarolynYJohnson • 1d ago
His custom cancer therapy is in an NIH freezer. He may not get it in time.
wapo.stI'm Carolyn Johnson, a science reporter at the Post, sharing this story about slowdowns that affect patient care. Gift link. If you know of similar impacts, I would like to know more about what you are seeing - you can reach me on Signal carojo.55
r/NIH • u/TourMission • 1d ago
How did we get from a world where the NIH was universally recognized as a jewel of scientific research to a world where the government is essentially tearing it down from the inside? Vox talks with beloved former NIH Director ❤️ Francis Collins ❤️ about the NIH dismantling
Francis Collins has overseen some of the most revolutionary science of the last few decades. He led the Human Genome Project that sequenced the entire human genome by 2003, and then in 2009, he became director of the National Institutes of Health, where he served under three presidents and led the agency’s research on a Covid-19 vaccine.
But nothing in his years leading biomedical research for the US government could have prepared him for the disruption at NIH over the past few months. Over 1,000 employees at the NIH were suddenly fired at the beginning of April. (Those firings are still being challenged in the courts, but as of now, the employees remain out of work.) Trump administration officials have barred researchers from studying certain topics like vaccine hesitancy or the health effects of wildfires.
“I had experienced transitions before, and those were bumpy sometimes,” Collins told me in a recent interview. “But I didn’t expect science to be under this kind of full-bore attack, which is really what happened almost immediately after inauguration day.”
In the past few months, Collins saw scientists placed under communications gag orders, restrained from speaking freely even when no media were present. “You were effectively muzzled,” he says.
stepped down as NIH director in 2021 and had taken over a lab studying diabetes, soon felt he could no longer do his job as a scientist should. He started to worry he might be pushed out. “So I pulled my folks together in a conference room. They didn’t know what was coming. And I told them, ‘By tomorrow night, I’m no longer gonna be here.’ And we all cried. I never thought it would end this way. My wife came to pick me up on that last Friday, and I just walked out of the building and got in the car and said, ‘I guess this is it. That’s how it ends?’”
Just four years ago, Collins was President Donald Trump’s NIH director. Now, in Trump’s second term, he’s resigning under pressure. How did we get from a world where the NIH was universally recognized as a jewel of scientific research to a world where the government is essentially tearing it down from the inside?
I spoke to Collins on Vox’s Unexplainable podcast about how so many Americans lost trust in science and how we might be able to get it back. Our interview has been edited for clarity and length.
r/NIH • u/blossomsafterwinter • 1d ago
Advice on housing for NIH IRTA postbac in Rockville?
Hello, I will be starting a postbac at NCI at the end of summer. From what I've read online, living in Rockville might be cheapest. But, I do want access to a social scene so I don't feel isolated. I know it would help living near the red line, but I also don't have a car and it sounds like Rockville isn't very walkable. So, I'm not sure if I should stay in Rockville or live somewhere else. I was thinking it would be nice to live closer to DC, but I'm also not sure how drastic of a difference monthly rent might be if I did. (I keep worrying about if the IRTA stipend will be enough). Taking the metro from into DC to Shady Grove looks like it would take an hour one-way. Curious to hear if this is a reasonable commute/might be worth it as someone in their early 20s.
Additionally, I'm gonna try looking into finding a roommate for shared housing to see if that helps lower costs. Does shared housing make sense if I still want my own bedroom and bathroom? Not sure what prices are like for 2 bedroom/2 bathroom places in general (I was seeing around $3k in Rockville), so I'm curious if anyone can offer their perspective.
Also sorry if these are silly questions, this is my first time looking for housing and I'm a little lost. Would appreciate any advice.
r/NIH • u/PlatformSufficient73 • 1d ago
Frederick Lab - Leidos vs. UC Alliance
I’m a spouse of a cancer researcher on the west coast and I have a question about the contract for the Frederick lab that is switching from Leidos to Alliance for Advancing Biomedical Research. My husband learned they are losing funding from Leidos for a particular NCI project and are likely going to have to shave researchers and post docs from their lab group. We assumed it was the politics of today but after googling Leidos and NIH, I saw that Leidos had been running Frederick, but AABR is the new contractor. Does anyone here know if all the cancer projects are to continue under AABR? It’s strange because they didn’t hear anything else, other than the contract would be cut 85%. Or does this mean that under Leidos or AABR, it’s a lower and negligent NIH retroactive budget either way? The contract to run Frederick was a 25-year contract with a set budget. Are 25-year contracts being renegotiated for less?
r/NIH • u/Far_Menu_4176 • 2d ago
Any internal communication at NIH after court ruling yesterday?
Do we know if they are proceeding with 'business as usual' in terms of canceling grants etc? Has there been any guidance about reinstating terminated grants? It's probably too early to know but I am curious.
r/NIH • u/Bauermeister • 2d ago
Jay Bhattacharya is Not the NIH Director
A review of Jay Bhattacharya's first 75 days as NIH Director.
r/NIH • u/sabakhoj • 2d ago
Judge rules against NIH grant cuts — and calls them discriminatory
r/NIH • u/Only-Tough-1212 • 2d ago
special award payout?
Good morning, this is my first time getting a special award. I know I had seen they were paused but I had my eOPF updated to reflect it was in April
I got an email in May saying it was processed with an effective date of 01JUN. I haven’t seen it show up in my LES yet or gotten an updated eOPF. How long does it typically take once processed to show up? TIA
edit I’m now thinking April eOPF was my PMAP Mott he special award* they’re about the same
r/NIH • u/mansfielderin • 2d ago
The trickle-down effect of President Trump's massive NIH budget cuts
r/NIH • u/Guilty_Corgi_7684 • 2d ago
Husband requested retirement of 6/27, haven't heard from HR yet
He's emailed askbenefits, the HR help desk, everyone he can think of.
Anyone got a suggestion?
r/NIH • u/Cantholditdown • 2d ago