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Posts by Rebekah Evans

I'm getting tons this year! Mainly for research experience.

1 week ago 1 0 0 0
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EARA | News - Brain Prize winners assert animal research as irreplaceable 2025 Brain Prize winners, Michelle Monje of Stanford Medicine and Frank Winkler of Heidelberg University Hospital, made clear that animal research remains essential to their work.  In an FENS…

In a @fens.org article, based on an interview with @tvvde.bsky.social, neuroscientists Michelle Monje and Frank Winkler, the 2025 Brain Prize winners, made clear that animal research remains essential to their work.
🔗 www.eara.eu/news/brain-p... #AnimalResearch #Brain #BrainPrize #neuroscience #mice

3 weeks ago 9 7 0 0
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Bhattacharya Appropriation Oversight Hearing NIH testifying to Congress on 03/17/2026 [YouTube Link] 20:18 – lauding NIH funded research for the latest highly promising HIV medications which have the potential for an eradication success…

Bhattacharya Appropriation Oversight Hearing drugmonkey.wordpress.com/2026/03/17/b...

1 month ago 15 12 1 1

this is an out-and-out lie

multi-year funding doesn’t give ANYONE more money up-front

the money simply sits in different account at NIH

no one gets money sooner

1 month ago 58 17 1 2
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Analysis: Why the research money isn’t flowing from NSF and NIH White House review of agency spending plans for this year is causing delays

This Russell Vought, trying to usurp the power of the purse.

Congress and the people have made it abundantly clear that they want to fund science.

But Vought keeps trying to steal those funds.

www.science.org/content/arti...

1 month ago 109 61 5 2
2026 essay competition

2026 essay competition

Oh wow. I know people here have THOUGHTS. Write them up & submit!!

I love that all essays have to be public before entering. This is exactly the type of conversation we need more of. (Also cash prizes + philanthropy is listening)

Now which on my list should I pick 🤔?

astera.org/essay-compet...

1 month ago 30 17 2 0

This is the work of 2-5 people, full time, for five years. Work that is trying to increase knowledge of the world, of human health and trying to create a healthier population.

Which we somehow can’t afford. Because we need to kill hundreds of people in far off lands for reasons that are false.

1 month ago 57 15 0 0

This is because of Vought's multi year funding mandate, which wastes government money by having it sit dormant for years instead of being used for science.
Its the opposite of efficiency. They are using the same amount of money to fund less science.

1 month ago 2 0 0 0
Graph of award probability of R35 and R01 from NIH factbook as a function of review rank percentile. As is apparent, 2025 is a significant departure, with lower award probabilities at all scores <40 and significant departures from norm, where even being in the top 10% is no longer a nearly certain indicator of success.

Data source: https://report.nih.gov/nihdatabook/report/302

Graph of award probability of R35 and R01 from NIH factbook as a function of review rank percentile. As is apparent, 2025 is a significant departure, with lower award probabilities at all scores <40 and significant departures from norm, where even being in the top 10% is no longer a nearly certain indicator of success. Data source: https://report.nih.gov/nihdatabook/report/302

The data is in: the NIH goalposts have shifted.

What were once almost certain fundable scores have become coin flips and what used to be likely grants have become aspirational, leading to fewer awards.

Another manifestation of how HHS policies have led to fewer awards and less science.

1 month ago 694 423 19 62

It's because of Vought's multi year funding mandate which wastes government money by having it sit dormant for years rather than funding science.

1 month ago 5 1 1 0
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The impact is already hitting science agencies hard. The NIH—the world's largest public biomedical research funder—has had to rely on leftover stopgap funds.

New grant awards have slowed to a trickle — exacerbating the effects of a record-long shutdown in October.

(h/t @jeremymberg.bsky.social)

1 month ago 179 107 3 2
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White House stalls release of approved US science budgets The US Congress rejected sweeping cuts to science agencies. But the NIH, the NSF and NASA have had their spending slowed.

Congress rejected massive cuts to US science budgets for 2026, but much of the money still isn’t flowing to researchers.

The culprit? The White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is quietly slow-walking the release of funds. 🧵👇

1 month ago 1127 758 22 82
Line graph of the number new and competitive renewal grants funded by NIH in fiscal year 2026 through February 20, compared to fiscal years 2020-2025. The fiscal year 2026 is well below the other curves.

Line graph of the number new and competitive renewal grants funded by NIH in fiscal year 2026 through February 20, compared to fiscal years 2020-2025. The fiscal year 2026 is well below the other curves.

New and Competitive Renewals

Only 803 grants have been made compared to ~2650 in fiscal years 2023 and 2024 through February 20.

All institutes and centers (include OD now) have made awards except NIAAA, NLM, NCCIH, and FIC.

3/4

1 month ago 22 25 4 3

Those 1 pipette per cell days are amazing.

1 month ago 1 0 1 0
A line graph shown the number of NIH new and competitive awards funded for fiscal year 2026 (through 2/13/26) compared with fiscal years 2021-2025. The fiscal year 2026 is lagging well behind with only 569 awards made through 2/13/26 compared to >2000 for previous fiscal years.

A line graph shown the number of NIH new and competitive awards funded for fiscal year 2026 (through 2/13/26) compared with fiscal years 2021-2025. The fiscal year 2026 is lagging well behind with only 569 awards made through 2/13/26 compared to >2000 for previous fiscal years.

New and competitive renewal awards.

The number of awards is 569 compared with more than 2200 through the same date in earlier fiscal years.

All ICs have now made awards except for NIAAA, NCCIH, NLM, FIC, and OD. NEI (Eye Institute) made its first award during the new period.

3/4

2 months ago 32 43 6 6

We find that chronic nicotine, when administered to adult mice, decreases dopaminergic neuron spontaneous firing rate and rebound activity. These effects could protect the neurons by decreasing their metabolic load.

2 months ago 24 2 0 2

The reason for this is that nicotine's protective effects seem to be only preventative, in that it reduces the risk of developing Parkinson's, but doesn't have a therapeutic effect on symptoms or disease progression after diagnosis.

2 months ago 11 0 1 1

The goal here was to understand why nicotine can sometimes act in a neuroprotective way.
We tested the effects of chronic nicotine on two types of neurons that are known to degenerate in Parkinson's Disease, but tested the effects in healthy mice.

2 months ago 13 0 1 1

Excited to share our new findings on how chronic nicotine changes dopaminergic and cholinergic neural activity!

2 months ago 54 11 1 1

And another institute director... She had only been in place for 1 5-year term but no renewal.

The dismantling of the NIH leadership is painful to watch especially with the lack of clear process for replacing them and the history of hiring cronies.

2 months ago 102 35 1 1
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Watching the systematic dismantling of the world's largest funder of biomedical research is heartbreaking and infuriating

2 months ago 17 9 0 0

Looking forward to it!

2 months ago 19 0 1 0
A line grant showing new and competitive renewal awards made by NIH is fiscal year 2026 compared to 2021-2025. The line for fiscal year 2026 is very close to zero.

A line grant showing new and competitive renewal awards made by NIH is fiscal year 2026 compared to 2021-2025. The line for fiscal year 2026 is very close to zero.

My (now) weekly update on 2026 NIH funding.

New and competitive renewal awards.

3 new awards (compared to ~100 expected based on recent years).

No new ICs... still just NIA, NINDS, NIDCD, and NIDCR.

1/2

3 months ago 95 55 9 5
Graphic helps visualize how MYF funds FEWER grants despite the increase in budget approval by Congress.

https://www.researchamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/ACT-for-NIH-Multi-Year-Funding-One-Pager_October-2025.pdf

Graphic helps visualize how MYF funds FEWER grants despite the increase in budget approval by Congress. https://www.researchamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/ACT-for-NIH-Multi-Year-Funding-One-Pager_October-2025.pdf

🧪IMPORTANT! This graphic explains how science all over the US is funded. Congress approved a 2% increase in the #NIH budget for FY 26.

Buried in the bill-
Shift of ~40% of grants to MYF. This will still result in a 35% DECREASE in the NUMBER of grants funded per yr.

Russel Vought is behind this.

2 months ago 210 142 10 6

Dear Congresswoman @foushee.house.gov, the multi year funding (MYF) in the HHS/NIH bill is normed to 2025 - please propose an amendment to norm to 2024, like the Senate version. As it stands, ~1/4-1/3 of NIH $ will be sequestered by MYF, a big cut to the Triangle's STEM economy!

2 months ago 23 12 0 1

Multi-year funding is a dirty trick by #RussellVought. This way the #Trump administration can say they're spending what Congress appropriated for research, BUT they'll only fund 1/5 the number of grants. Call your Senators/Reps now. Science hangs in the balance. H/T @jenna-m-norton.bsky.social

3 months ago 169 95 3 0
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A Quiet Policy Shift That Could Devastate American Science Why NIH’s sudden move to multi-year grant funding should alarm every principal investigator and university

A reminder as Congress finalizes NIH appropriations: the bill must limit multiyear funding (MYF), Vought's way of cutting the NIH budget without cutting the budget. MYF will devastate the research workforce.

@safa-science.bsky.social wrote this in July. Still relevant: substack.com/@scienceandf...

3 months ago 66 33 1 3
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patrick star from spongebob squarepants with his hands folded ALT: patrick star from spongebob squarepants with his hands folded

Likewise, Congressman Cole from Oklahoma is the chair of the overall House Appropriations committee.

If you can, reach out to his office as well.

It is noteworthy that OMB is willing to veto a bill over a minor-seeming NIH operational issue.

This makes me think this is part of a bigger plan...

3 months ago 46 25 1 2

Congressman Aderholt from Alabama is the chair and he is apparently willing to help OMB here, adding report language (which is toothless) rather than including this in the law.

If you are from Alabama, please contact his office and your Senators and share your thoughts.

2/3

3 months ago 36 26 2 1
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a close up of a brown surface with a few spots ALT: a close up of a brown surface with a few spots

The appropriations bill that includes NIH is being finalized.

The Senate bill includes a bipartisan amendment from Senators Capito (WV) and Baldwin (WI) limiting multi-year funding of grants.

The House version does not and OMB has issued a veto threat if the House includes such language.

1/3

3 months ago 101 65 8 14