With a total budget of $31 billion, the US National Institutes of Health appropriates a mere 11% to fund aging research. With a moderate growth in spending at all 27 NIH research centers, the growth is slower at the National Institute on Aging (NIA). In n2009, 17.5% of NIA grants were approved, compared with 20% percent approved for NIH overall, and in 2010 the NIA grant approval rate is projected to dive to 13%. In fact, less than one-third of the $3.46 billion in aging research reported this fiscal year is channeled through the NIA. While President Obama has proposed adding $1 billion, or 3.2%, to the NIH budget in the 2011 fiscal year, the NIA’s share would rise just 2.9%.
Aging Research Ranks Low on US National Institutes of Health (NIH) Funding
Milt Freudenheim, “Despite Aging Baby Boomers, N.I.H. Devotes Only 11 Percent to Elderly Studies.” The New York Times, June 28, 2010.
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