1. NIH funding of COVID-19 research in 2020: a cross-sectional study.
- Author
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Balaguru L, Dun C, Meyer A, Hennayake S, Walsh C, Kung C, Cary B, Migliarese F, Dai T, Bai G, Sutcliffe K, and Makary M
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Financing, Organized, Humans, National Institutes of Health (U.S.), United States, Biomedical Research, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: This study aims to characterise and evaluate the National Institutes of Health's (NIH's) grant allocation speed and pattern of COVID-19 research., Design: Cross-sectional study., Setting: COVID-19 NIH RePORTER Dataset was used to identify COVID-19 relevant grants., Participants: 1108 grants allocated to COVID-19 research., Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was to determine the number of grants and funding amount the NIH allocated for COVID-19 by research type and clinical/scientific area. The secondary outcome was to calculate the time from the funding opportunity announcement to the award notice date., Results: The NIH awarded a total of 56 169 grants in 2020, of which 2.0% (n=1108) wwas allocated for COVID-19 research. The NIH had a US$45.3 billion budget that year, of which 4.9% (US$2.2 billion) was allocated to COVID-19 research. The most common clinical/scientific areas were social determinants of health (n=278, 8.5% of COVID-19 funding), immunology (n=211, 25.8%) and pharmaceutical interventions research (n=208, 47.6%). There were 104 grants studying COVID-19 non-pharmaceutical interventions, of which 2 grants studied the efficacy of face masks and 6 studied the efficacy of social distancing. Of the 83 COVID-19 funded grants on transmission, 5 were awarded to study airborne transmission of COVID-19 and 2 grants on transmission of COVID-19 in schools. The average time from the funding opportunity announcement to the award notice date was 151 days (SD: ±57.9)., Conclusion: In the first year of the pandemic, the NIH diverted a small fraction of its budget to COVID-19 research. Future health emergencies will require research funding to pivot in a timely fashion and funding levels to be proportional to the anticipated burden of disease in the population., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2022
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