How Medical Research Cuts Would Hit Colleges and Hospitals in Every State
The Trump administration's proposal to cut NIH funding could reduce grants by over $5 billion, impacting medical research in several states and potentially hindering scientific progress and treatment development.
Read original articleThe Trump administration's proposal to cut medical research funding through the National Institutes of Health (NIH) could significantly impact colleges and hospitals across the United States. The plan aims to reduce indirect costs associated with research grants to a flat rate of 15%, which could lead to an estimated loss of over $5 billion in funding for various institutions. This change would particularly affect states like North Carolina, Missouri, and Pennsylvania, where medical research is heavily concentrated. The NIH allocated approximately $32 billion in grants in 2024, with a substantial portion directed towards essential indirect costs such as laboratory maintenance and administrative support. Critics argue that these cuts would hinder scientific progress and research capabilities, potentially slowing the development of new medical treatments and interventions. While the White House claims that the savings would be redirected to more research, many institutions fear they will have to scale back their research efforts or shift focus to less complex projects. The proposal has faced legal challenges from educational and hospital associations, highlighting concerns over the long-term implications for medical research funding and innovation in the U.S.
- The Trump administration's funding cuts could reduce NIH grants by over $5 billion.
- States with concentrated medical research, like North Carolina and Pennsylvania, may face significant losses.
- Critics warn that reduced funding will slow scientific progress and hinder the development of new treatments.
- Institutions may need to adjust budgets or reduce research activities due to funding shortfalls.
- Legal challenges are underway against the proposed funding changes from various associations.
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Indirect costs support researchers’ needs that the institution provides. For example, who ensures the researcher’s laptop is secure? For basic research, how is lab equipment obtained? Who provides infrastructure to access observational data from an electronic health record system? Categorize these services as you wish, but these services are needed, they have costs, and the expense will need to be covered for medical research to happen. If they can no longer be considered indirect, then they will become itemized and the researcher’s direct budget will have to cover them. For example, laptops permitted to access the institutional network may have a monthly fee that covers system admin time.
In the short run, it’ll mean some research simply won’t happen as the researcher doesn’t have budget for new fees the institution charges for equipment/services that were previously “free”. For new grants, it means a greater part of the research budget will have to be itemized with these costs, eg less funding for researcher or graduate assistant effort. Either the overall grant direct costs will have to go up, or less research happens.
The University of Washington took 55% off the top in "indirect costs." Then of the direct costs, a bunch more taxes went to the department, the lab, etc. I ended up getting about $40,000 total from that grant to fund my actual research.
I was told that this is just how the game works.
The Lesson: There is a huge amount of waste in academic grants.
The university does not need 55% indirect costs to fund my research. They gave me a laptop and an office to work in. But the laptop actually came out of direct costs. And as for the office... well, I tended not to use it. Coffeeshops were nicer places to work.
So that 55% — $357,500 — was not necessary for research. It disappeared in an administrative hierarchy that kept growing. I talked to professors from 20 years before, and they said that the administration had grown 3x in their time being there. They built their reputation as scientists when everything was smaller and cheaper. Now all that reputation is generating more money, which is getting gobbled up by an administration that wasn't needed when they produced their original successes.
But it's all so very shortsighted. The people directing all of this clearly have no idea what they're doing or why things are the way they are.
Take USAID as a good example. The reality is that USAID is a wealth transfer from the government to American companies (where most of the money was spent) AND it was an expresion of American soft power on foreign regimes. Dismantling USAID just creates a power vacuum for some other power to fill, likely China.
You see this with talk of a massive ethnic displacement from Gaza and the West Bank into Egypt and Jordan, an action that would likely topple what are essentially puppet regimes for US Middle Eastern interests.
NIH funding is actually a massive wealth transfer from the government to Big Pharma. Why? Because Big Pharma doesn't really discover novel compounds. Federally-funded research does. A lame duck Congress passed the Bayh-Dole Act [1] in a bipartisan way that was signed into law by the outgoing Jimmy Carter in 1980. This Act basically allowed Big Pharma to profit fully from federal research.
Big Pharma spends money on marketing, lobbying and any research they do is pretty much limited to patent extension.
We are witnessing the wholesale destruction of American power here. Certain accelerationists who would otherwise be in complete opposition to the current administration are actually celebrating what's going on for that reason. The government is setting up China to be the new big bad of the 21st century but ironically is creating a massive power vacuum for China to fill and extend its influence.
This is pure short-term profit thinking and we will see over the next 4 years looting of the public purse on a scale we've never seen before.
https://www.preposterousuniverse.com/podcast/2025/02/12/bonu...
If it's true that these indirect costs only contain expenses closely related to the actual research then they can just move to the actual grant with somewhat more accounting overhead. I suspect the universities are doing that accounting already for their internal purposes so it won't be that big a change.
But if it's true that a significant part of them are not related there would need to be significant changes in budgets, and whoever benefits will have a problem.
I suspect the truth is somewhere inbetween. In any case it's a good opportunity for these organizations to figure out how to become more cost effective.
Related
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The Trump administration has indefinitely suspended NIH research-grant reviews and travel, affecting 80% of its $47 billion budget, causing concern among researchers, especially early-career scientists, about funding delays.
White House budget proposal could shatter the National Science Foundation
The White House budget proposal may cut National Science Foundation funding by up to 66%, potentially reducing it from $9 billion to $3 billion, raising concerns about U.S. scientific leadership.
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The NIH's new policy setting indirect costs at 15% has led 22 states to sue, claiming it violates laws and could harm research funding. A federal judge has temporarily halted the policy.
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The Trump administration proposed significant cuts to science funding, targeting NIH and NSF, which may threaten research continuity, deter international researchers, and impact various scientific fields in the U.S.