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Ranganath Muniyappa
@dr_muniyappa
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Senior Clinician and Endocrinologist at NIDDK with an interest in diabetes, obesity, and cardiovascular disease. Views/comments my own. RTđźš« endorsement
Potomac
Joined January 2013
@anupsoans Opportunity is the greatest equalizer—when given the chance, talent and determination can overcome any barrier.
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@DavidResnik1962 @venkmurthy @NIH @UMich 💯 agree. The average indirect cost rate for NIH grant recipients is around 30%, stable for decades. With flat budgets and a growing scientific workforce, I’m not sure how cutting our way to continued dominance is possible.
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RT @Pontifex: I ask you to be vigilant against the temptation to cultivate a warlike spirit. Be vigilant lest you be poisoned by propaganda…
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@Pandas4Peace1 @venkmurthy @NIH @UMich Indeed. This debate isn't new—smart, knowledgeable, experienced people have been discussing it for decades.
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@rockytfs @venkmurthy @NIH @UMich Actually, they do. Institutions typically negotiate IDCs with HHS (not NIH), providing 'real world evidence' to justify their rate. Maybe they should make all justifications public.
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Already a blown call. That is not a flag. 🤔 we know how this is going to end. #SuperBowlLIX
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RT @RichardHanania: IRB and the entire “ethics” regime is the problem. Cutting indirect costs is a mixed bag. The low hanging fruit is doin…
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RT @PutrinoLab: Wanted to check-in with these new @NIH changes that are going to affect so many. First let me remind everyone: I run 6 hybr…
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@DanielJDrucker @FASEBorg FWIW Impaired Fasting Glucose Is Associated with Insulin Resistance in Patients with Germline Mutations in the Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia Type 1 (MEN1) Gene
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Honest, balanced, and sensible take by @jflier
@drjohnm asks all the right questions. Worth a listen!
I tell it like it is on NIH IDC craziness on the @Sensible__Med podcast. @drjohnm.
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RT @SashaGusevPosts: Here's a study of kidney disease from *yesterday* (: - 601 genes with both coding and non-codi…
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🎯 "We also have to remember that grants are not an entitlement. We are not owed anything."
The indiscriminate and ill-conceived slashing of indirects by the @NIH yesterday must be amended if want to restore America’s leadership role biomedical research. 15% simply isn’t enough for institutions to provide the basic infrastructure needed to run a successful lab. I say this as someone who has been and remains deeply critical of the NIH, its funding system and of the ways universities are structured and spend money. We would all benefit from a genuine reexamination of how and to what @NIH funds are allocated, and I remain optimistic that once the dust settles and new NIH leadership is in place that this is what will happen and this hack job by people who don’t understand or care about research will be forgotten. And I’m sorry but I can’t help but laugh at the people who are demanding a full-throated defense of the current indirect levels. Nearly every PI I’ve known for my entire career has complained about excessive indirect rates. This is mostly because, despite their importance, even most PIs haven’t bothered to actually understand them, and because they don’t FEEL that universities are actually spending the money to support their research. Whether they are or not nobody really knows because in the typically Byzantine maze of university budgets it’s often very hard to figure out. There are also lots of actual shenanigans that go on especially at places with the highest indirect rates to use funds to build out the institution and increase its power rather than to directly support funded research projects. And anyone who says administrative bloat at universities isn’t real and partially fueled by indirects is either blind or part of the bloat. So let’s get organized to have an actual constructive response to this firebomb. Scientists need to advocate for what is best for research - and we have to do it ourselves because the institutions that claim to represent us - universities and scientific societies in particular - have their own goals that often do not align with ours. We also have to remember that grants are not an entitlement. We are not owed anything. If we want to continue benefiting from the public support we have always enjoyed, we have to show the public and their representatives - even ones we might not always agree with - that we’re spending their money wisely.
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