The National Institutes of Health funds research, but some scientists fear that funding may be pulled or paused by the Trump administration.
The Trump administration continues its deluge of executive orders that directly affect science and research, just days after being sworn in. Following the executive orders (EOs) taking the United States out of the Paris Agreement and World Health Organization and the scientific nonsense in the EO on trans and non-binary people,
An email obtained by NPR says NIH employees are subject to a travel freeze and offers of employment are being rescinded. Scientists worry about disruptions to critical research.
The first week of President Donald Trump’s second term included several executive orders and actions that will be detrimental to public health.
The halt has frozen research grants, meetings and key health updates. “Everything is basically in chaos,” said one cancer researcher.
Madison's research funding comes from the federal government, but the president is barring Health and Human Services officials from communicating outside of the government, for now.
Donald Trump’s pick to lead the federal health agency has vowed to replace hundreds of staffers and shift research away from infectious diseases and vaccines. Such an overhaul could imperil the development of life-saving treatments,
The Trump administration’s freeze on communications from U.S. health agencies is leading to another disruption: the abrupt cancellation of scientific meetings. The move covers a swath of health conditions,
Donald Trump has been sworn in, and his new administration has immediately turned its sites on the NIH. The danger to US biomedical research has never been more acute.
Plus: President Donald Trump again suggested abolishing FEMA. | Trump cancels Dr. Anthony Fauci's security detail. | It's all on The Excerpt.
Joe Exotic says he should receive a pardon from President Donald Trump. "Good for the January Sixers" on their clemency, the "Tiger King" star says, but he thinks he's a more deserving candidate.