Friday, November 20, 2009

NIH Funded Research is One Public Investment that Yields Enormous Returns

As a researcher who has been supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for over 20 years I am keenly aware of the largely prudent and accountable ways in which grant monies are spent by academic researchers. Dollar for dollar, the biomedical research enterprise may be one of the most cost effective of federally subsidized programs. I see first hand the enormous returns being paid on the taxpayer investment in biomedical research in the form of advancements in our understanding of disease mechanisms and new therapeutic approaches. In addition, federally funding of biomedical research directly and substantially benefits the American biotechnology industry. The days of biologists making their own reagents and gizmos to conduct experiments are long gone. Researchers now depend on a huge array of commercially available reagents, chemicals, consumables, kits and advanced instrumentation to conduct their investigations. Furthermore, a rising trend is to contract companies to provide highly specialized research services. In effect, this means that a large, and growing fraction of federal grant dollars are being funneled to U.S. companies that produce these goods and services. Therefore, an argument can be made that augmenting the NIH budget will stimulate the American biotechnology industry. I believe that this is indeed true and is only one of the reasons why I advocate doubling the NIH budget.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Shared Resource Facilities: Discovery Engines for Biomedical Research Institutions

In most academic biomedical research institutions, shared resource facilities exist to provide researchers access to state-of-the-art technologies. The services offered through these facilities are extremely valuable to advancing the research programs of investigators either by generating data for testing or developing scientific hypotheses. At the 2009 Southeast Institutional Development Award (IDeA) Regional Meeting held in Charleston, South Carolina on November 10th, I was a panelist in a session focusing on shared resource facilities. Based on my 13 years of experience as a director of shared resource facilities at the Medical University of South Carolina (http://proteogenomics.musc.edu/), I talked about issues related to sustaining financial support for shared resource facilities and incentivizing their use.