It gets personal
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wrote on 8 Mar 2025, 02:51 last edited by Renauda 3 Aug 2025, 02:58
Hoping your noble medical research project is saved from the pyre.
The uncertainty you are under is so wasteful and unnecessary. A dictatorship of the inept executed by mindless bean counters
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wrote on 8 Mar 2025, 03:19 last edited by
Hope things turn in the right direction for you @jon-nyc .
Killing a mosquito with a sledgehammer is not the right answer.
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wrote 29 days ago last edited by
Our PI has't gotten a stop work letter yet so it seems like a good sign. Some colleagues of hers have for CDC-associated work. Maybe NIH really was excluded. Though it's the 800lb gorilla of grant making institutions.
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wrote 29 days ago last edited by
No significant cuts on our side yet, that I’m aware of anyway.
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wrote 25 days ago last edited by
We lost our funding last night.
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wrote 25 days ago last edited by
Other possible grants?
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wrote 25 days ago last edited by
Try China?
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wrote 25 days ago last edited by
How were you funded and what percentage? Was it one grant or more?
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wrote 24 days ago last edited by
GoFundMe?
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wrote 24 days ago last edited by
Is stem cell involved?
If not, maybe the churches can step in. -
wrote 24 days ago last edited by jon-nyc
It was a single U Grant originally for $6MM. I'm not exactly sure how much has been billed against it, my guess is roughly half.
We're looking into the possibility that one or two other center might be able to invoice the NIH directly for their participation based on the way the grant is worded, which would help. We will also fundraise against it both from interested biotechs and patients. We will also have patients send letters, especially patients in Alabama, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Utah which all have GOP senators and affected centers.
Senator Thom Tillis may not see the logic in cutting rare disease funding at UNC because Hamilton Hall was occupied last year. Ditto Mike Lee and UU.
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wrote 24 days ago last edited by
@jon-nyc said in It gets personal:
We lost our funding last night.
That’s a bummer. Hopefully the work can continue.
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wrote 24 days ago last edited by
I’m working with both UNC and U of Utah now, plus Wake Forest.
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wrote 24 days ago last edited by
The work won't end, it's too important, we won't let it.
The bigger fear is what happens with research and clinical trials generally if the indirects get cut overnight. That's too much for a little foundation to backstop.
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wrote 24 days ago last edited by
I can see cutting future grants. Cutting active studies, especially clinical trials, is exceptionally wasteful.
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I can see cutting future grants. Cutting active studies, especially clinical trials, is exceptionally wasteful.
wrote 24 days ago last edited by@Mik said in It gets personal:
Cutting active studies, especially clinical trials, is exceptionally wasteful.
This is more appreciated in the biomed fields but less appreciated in the computer/infotech fields.
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wrote 24 days ago last edited by
Sorry for the thread hijack, but another area where the funding cuts are somewhat personal. A (distant) friend works in the Soybean Innovation Lab at the University of IL. They have lost their funding and are in the process of closing.
Illinois is the leading producer of soybeans in the United States, and the industry is crucial to Illinois’ economy. According to the Illinois Department of Agriculture, Illinois is the nation’s second-leading exporter of soybeans and ranks third in the export of agricultural goods as a whole, earning over $8 billion worth.
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wrote 24 days ago last edited by jon-nyc
Johns Hopkins laid off 2k workers yesterday.
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wrote 24 days ago last edited by Horace
That's 247 American jobs and 2000 jobs in other countries.