Aaron J. Kowalski, Ph.D., CEO of Breakthrough T1D, spoke with Managed Healthcare Executive, about the possible impacts of the NIH’s cuts to indirect research funding.
Although a judge has temporarily blocked President Donald Trump’s executive order cutting funds for indirect research costs, researchers have concerns about the long-term impact of this order.
The National Institutes of Health recently announced that indirect costs would be capped at about 15% across all NIH grants for indirect costs in lieu of a separately negotiated rate for indirect costs.
Aaron J. Kowalski, Ph.D., CEO of Breakthrough T1D, spoke with Managed Healthcare Executive, saying the move will disrupt critical medical advances, impacting the NIH’s Special Diabetes program and type 1 diabetes research.
All institutions are likely to feel the impact of these cuts, Kowalski. “At my institution, Rutgers, We don’t have a Harvard endowment, and it will mean research will grind and slow,” he said. “You can look across the country at the flagship state universities and many of the premier research universities are funded by the NIH.
Kowalski said this funding cuts could impact the NIH Special Diabetes Program, a special funding program for research on the prevention and cure of type 1 diabetes that began in 1998. This program has enabled the creation of several collaborative research programs for type 1 diabetes. These include:
The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases administers the Special Diabetes program.
Kowalski said this won’t just impact diabetes research but research in many areas as well, including cancer and Alzheimer’s.
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