Rikurzhen
Gold Member
- Jul 24, 2014
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Francis Collins informed the world:
The National Institutes of Health announced the award of nearly $31 million in fiscal year 2014 funds to develop new approaches that engage researchers, including those from backgrounds underrepresented in biomedical sciences, and prepare them to thrive in the NIH-funded workforce. These awards are part of a projected five-year program to support more than 50 awardees and partnering institutions in establishing a national consortium to develop, implement, and evaluate approaches to encourage individuals to start and stay in biomedical research careers. Supported by the NIH Common Fund and all NIH 27 institutes and centers
Multiculturalism sure is great. Now we get to see how the missions of organizations get corrupted in order to make multiculturalism work. It's more important to spend tax money to handhold unqualified black researchers and students to get them to the point where they might be barely qualified to be hired by the NIH than it is to do health research with qualified researchers working in labs where there is little diversity in personnel.
Funding which should be directed towards the mission of the organization, HEALTH RESEARCH, is instead being directed towards a social goal of enticing more minorities to enter the field by bribing them to do so.
We should have something ready here,'" Collins told The Huffington Post on Friday. "Frankly, if we had not gone through our 10-year slide in research support, we probably would have had a vaccine in time for this that would've gone through clinical trials and would have been ready."
It's not just the production of a vaccine that has been hampered by money shortfalls. Collins also said that some therapeutics to fight Ebola "were on a slower track than would've been ideal, or that would have happened if we had been on a stable research support trajectory."
Last month the NIH saw fit to spend money on this:It's not just the production of a vaccine that has been hampered by money shortfalls. Collins also said that some therapeutics to fight Ebola "were on a slower track than would've been ideal, or that would have happened if we had been on a stable research support trajectory."
The National Institutes of Health announced the award of nearly $31 million in fiscal year 2014 funds to develop new approaches that engage researchers, including those from backgrounds underrepresented in biomedical sciences, and prepare them to thrive in the NIH-funded workforce. These awards are part of a projected five-year program to support more than 50 awardees and partnering institutions in establishing a national consortium to develop, implement, and evaluate approaches to encourage individuals to start and stay in biomedical research careers. Supported by the NIH Common Fund and all NIH 27 institutes and centers
Funding which should be directed towards the mission of the organization, HEALTH RESEARCH, is instead being directed towards a social goal of enticing more minorities to enter the field by bribing them to do so.