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Saturday, March 19, 2022
NIH Awarded More Than 56,000 Grants in 2020. Just 2 Percent Were for Studying COVID
More evidence that the public health bureaucracy dropped the ball when a once-in-a-generation pandemic hit.
"During the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, the federal
government approved an unprecedented amount of emergency spending in
response to a new and poorly understood public health threat.
But the federal government's agency dedicated to actually studying public health threats was slow to respond.
In fact, just 2 percent of the more than 56,000 grants issued by the
National Institutes of Health (NIH) during 2020 went to projects
studying COVID-19, even as the virus killed thousands of Americans and
ransacked the global economy. That's the conclusion of a new study
from researchers at Johns Hopkins University and Penn State University
that's been accepted (but not yet peer-reviewed or published) by The BMJ, a Britain-based medical journal.
"In the first year of the pandemic, the NIH diverted a small fraction
of its budget to COVID-19 research," the researchers conclude. "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."
The 1,108 grants awarded for studying COVID-19 accounted for just 5.3
percent of the NIH's $42 billion budget in 2020, according to the
report. The NIH dedicated significantly more funding toward behavioral
and social science research than coronaviruses during 2020. Studies of
rare diseases received about 2.5 times as much funding as coronavirus
research, while research into aging got more than twice as much funding.
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.12.08.21267482v1.full-textNIH Funding by Research Area (2020)
The COVID-19 research that was funded took a while to get
approval. Researchers found that the average time it took for the NIH to
approve a COVID-related project was 151 days, with most funding not
delivered until the final months of the year.
"The lack of rapid clinical research funding to understand COVID-19
transmission may have contributed to the politicization of the virus,"
the researchers argue in the paper.
"Some of the most basic questions that were being asked of medical
professionals in early 2020, such as how it spreads, when infected
individuals are most contagious, and whether masks protect individuals
from spreading or getting the virus, went unanswered. In the absence of
evidence-based answers to the common questions the public was asking,
political opinions filled that vacuum."
The study should raise more serious questions about the public health
bureaucracy's ability to respond quickly to a developing crisis. For
years, the NIH was frequently criticized by figures like Sen. Rand Paul
(R–Ky.) for funding wasteful studies that fed cocaine to Japanese quail and nicotine to zebrafish.
But when former President Donald Trump proposed cutting the NIH budget
by $4.5 billion in 2019, the agency's defenders fretted that the public
would miss out on future "ideas and breakthroughs" that would have been generated with those grants.
By comparison, a private-sector effort that started from scratch at
the beginning of the pandemic was able to invest $50 million in COVID-19
research during 2020. The so-called Fast Grants program was a joint
effort of Tyler Cowen, an economics researcher at George Mason
University; Patrick Collison, co-founder of Stripe, an online payment
platform; and Patrick Hsu, a scientist at the University of California,
Berkeley. Nature reported
in August 2021 that 67 percent of grant recipients "said their research
wouldn't have been possible without a fast grant, and about one-third
said it accelerated their work by months."
Fast Grant applications were designed to be completed in less than an
hour, with funding decisions made in two days and money delivered
within a week.
That stands in stark contrast to the timeline for NIH grants. "From
the beginning, the institutional response [to COVID-19] has been
lethargic," wrote Cowen, Collison, and Hsu in a June 2021 blog post
reviewing their project. "We found that scientists—among them the
world's leading virologists and coronavirus researchers—were stuck on
hold, waiting for decisions about whether they could repurpose their existing funding for this exponentially growing catastrophe."
Specifically, they pointed to the fact that NIH grant applications
require three phases of review by as many as 20 different scientists. No
one is harmed by a long review process for a project that gives blow to
birds, but the COVID-19 pandemic required a speedier response that
wasn't possible for creaky government bureaucracies. "It is difficult
for these bodies, such as the NIH, to adapt as circumstances change,"
the trio concluded.
The new research from Johns Hopkins and Penn State seems to confirm
what Cowen, Collison, and Hsu were seeing on the ground as the pandemic
hit. The public health bureaucracy's failure to rapidly respond to a
once-in-a-generation crisis likely slowed crucial research, left
scientists in the dark about how the coronavirus spreads, and created
space for misinformation to reign.
We could have followed the science—if only the bureaucrats weren't getting in the way."
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