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Tag Archives: spending
RFA Ticker, 5/9/16
We observe International ME/CFS Awareness Day this week, and there are still #MillionsMissing in essential research dollars. Total RFAs Issued by NIH: 210 (October 2015 to date) Total Dollars Committed to RFAs: $1,996,940,000 (October 2015 to date) Total RFAs for … Continue reading
Posted in Advocacy, Research
Tagged accountability, action, funding, government, grants, NIH, priorities, researchers, RFA, RFA Ticker, speaking out, spending
3 Comments
RFA Ticker, 5/2/16
The last week of April was not the lightest week for RFA’s, but it was pretty close. Three of those RFAs came from the Office or Research Infrastructure Programs in the Office of the Director. NIH has now issued over … Continue reading
Posted in Advocacy, Research
Tagged accountability, action, funding, government, grants, NIH, priorities, researchers, RFA, RFA Ticker, speaking out, spending
1 Comment
RFA Ticker, 4/25/16
NIH issued more than $42 million in new RFAs last week. My question is whether RFAs will crack $2 billion before ME/CFS finally gets its own. Total RFAs Issued by NIH: 198 (October 2015 to date) Total Dollars Committed to … Continue reading
Posted in Advocacy, Research
Tagged accountability, action, funding, government, grants, NIH, priorities, researchers, RFA, RFA Ticker, speaking out, spending
2 Comments
RFA Ticker, 4/18/16
It was a light week for RFAs in general, but NIH still committed almost $7 million to areas that are not ME/CFS. Total RFAs Issued by NIH: 188 (October 2015 to date) Total Dollars Committed to RFAs: $1,914,725,000 (October 2015 … Continue reading
Posted in Advocacy, Research
Tagged accountability, funding, government, grants, NIH, politics, priorities, researchers, RFA, RFA Ticker, speaking out, spending
4 Comments
RFA Ticker 4/11/16
Last week, five Institutes announced interest in receiving applications for administrative supplements for existing grants to increase ME/CFS research. Obviously, it’s not the announcement we’ve been waiting for, but it is a step. Let’s take a closer look at how … Continue reading
Posted in Advocacy, Research
Tagged accountability, funding, government, grants, NIH, priorities, recommendations, researchers, RFA, RFA Ticker, speaking out, spending
2 Comments
RFA Ticker, 4/4/16
Last week was a big one for RFA news. NIH issued revised responses to the August 2015 CFS Advisory Committee recommendations. Regarding RFAs, NIH said: “The Trans-NIH ME/CFS Working Group is in the final stages of putting together a comprehensive … Continue reading
Posted in Advocacy, Research
Tagged accountability, action, CFSAC, funding, government, grants, NIH, politics, priorities, researchers, RFA, RFA Ticker, spending
13 Comments
RFA Ticker, 3/28/16
As I mentioned last week, these numbers apply to NIH issued RFAs only, not FDA or other agency-funded RFAs. Also, I think it might help to review some terminology. “RFA” stands for a Request for Applications. This mechanism sets money … Continue reading
Posted in Advocacy, Research
Tagged accountability, funding, government, grants, NIH, politics, priorities, researchers, RFA, RFA Ticker, speaking out, spending
11 Comments
RFA Ticker, 3/21/16
I’ve reexamined the RFA data, and found a total of 12 out of 174 RFAs that are actually being funded by FDA. I’ve removed the dollar figures being set aside by FDA from the weekly and overall totals. I also … Continue reading
Posted in Advocacy, Research
Tagged accountability, funding, government, grants, NIH, politics, priorities, researchers, RFA, RFA Ticker, speaking out, spending
2 Comments
RFA Ticker, 3/14/16
During the March 8, 2016 NIH conference call with ME/CFS advocates, I asked Dr. Walter Koroshetz of NINDS if he could commit to the community that an RFA would be forthcoming. He said no, and then qualified the answer by … Continue reading
Posted in Advocacy, Research
Tagged accountability, funding, government, grants, NIH, politics, priorities, researchers, RFA, RFA Ticker, speaking out, spending
27 Comments
Staying the Course to Where?
Dr. Francis Collins, Director of the National Institutes of Health, made a request of the ME/CFS community. During the March 8, 2016 NIH telebriefing, Dr. Collins said: So please take our commitment with great seriousness. Please also stay the course … Continue reading →