Sentences with phrase «nih grantees»

NIH Grantees: Where Have All The Young Ones Gone?
This will make it easier to enforce compliance with the rules, for example by withholding funding for NIH grantees or imposing fines on companies regulated by FDA, said Kathy Hudson, NIH's deputy director for science, outreach, and policy.
NIH already has a 9 - year - old policy that essentially gives extra points to grant proposals from early - career investigators that has helped stabilize the fraction of NIH grantees under age 45.
Grassley's past investigations have led NIH to tighten financial conflict - of - interest reporting by NIH grantees.
Secondly, we would join a small section of the database (payees in New York State; the whole database was too much for us to handle) with a publicly available database of NIH grantees.
Draft conflict of interest regulations issued last summer include «paid authorship» in a list of activities that NIH grantees must report to their institutions for review.
A mathematical model developed by NIH grantees predicts that women must take the antiretroviral medication Truvada daily to prevent HIV infection via vaginal sex, whereas just two doses per week can protect men from HIV infection via anal sex.
Responding to an uproar over conflicts of interest in biomedical research, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced on Friday that it is seeking comments on whether to tighten federal conflict - of - interest rules for NIH grantees.
The agency is expected to issue a notice soon seeking comments on ways to strengthen conflicts - of - interest regulations that apply to NIH grantees.
On the other hand, proposed new rules for NIH grantees seek to strictly monitor all ties between academic scientists and the industry partners required to move treatments from the lab to patients.
In a motion filed yesterday with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, the UC regents write that they are the largest NIH grantee affected by the case.
He is a top - rated NIH grantee.

Not exact matches

On January 18, AAAS reaffirmed its support for the current public access policy of the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), stating that it does not endorse the Research Works Act, which would prevent NIH from requiring its grantees to make biomedical research findings freely available via the National Library of Medicine's Web site.
NIH will also work to reduce regulatory burdens on grantees.
• Also on ScienceInsider, Jeffrey Mervis introduces readers to Jonathan Dordick, a professor of chemical and biological engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York, and a National Institutes of Health (NIH) grantee.
In a follow - on report dated 18 November, the IG has now examined the information that 41 grantee institutions filed with NIH in 2006 as well as documents kept by the institutions, such as disclosure forms.
Another $ 500 million will be available for construction and renovation of NIH buildings, and an additional $ 1.3 billion will go to grantees to renovate their research facilities and to purchase shared equipment — a total of $ 10 billion in economic stimulus funds.
The average age of a first - time National Institutes of Health (NIH) grantee is well into the 40s.
At the end of those five years, NIH was held totally flat without even inflationary increases and the result is that most of the money that the NIH receives each year, the vast majority has been committed to grantees who got their awards at the time of growth and now there is very little money left to pay the inflationary increases to avoid [afford] new grants.
And in a surprise move, a U.S. House committee has recommended that the National Institutes of Health (NIH) post its grantees» papers on a free Internet site.
And even when grantees dig out that information and submit it to NIH in their annual reports and renewal applications, the agency hasn't found a way to compile it and use it effectively.
The Federal Research Public Access Act (FRPAA), H.R. 5037, builds on NIH's 2 - year - old requirement that grantees submit their peer - reviewed manuscripts to the free PubMed Central database for posting within 12 months after publication in a journal.
But NIH does not want grantees to give away tax - funded work just because one of the reagents was developed by an outside company.
NIH uses a Commons ID for its grantees.
However, the grantee must obtain prior written approval from NIH for a change in the direction, type of research or training, or other areas that constitute a significant change from the aims, objectives, or purposes of the proposed project (hereafter «change in scope»).
«The tension here is both to recognize that [the paper] is an unfortunate outcome, but also not to put NIH in a position of basically playing a nanny over top of everything our grantees do.»
NIH staff and grantees will wait longer for eRA staff to respond to questions and fix system problems, and many eRA projects will be curtailed.
Since 2008, NIH has required its grantees to post their peer - reviewed manuscripts in a free online archive after an embargo of up to 12 months following a paper's publication in a journal.
Since 2008, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has required its grantees to submit their accepted manuscripts to its PubMed Central repository, which posts full - text manuscripts online within 12 months of publication.
Dr. Lin is currently a grantee of both NIH and Fulbright, with a long - term interest in reducing the prevalence of substance abuse around the world.
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