Opinion - NIH funding cuts imperil lifesaving drugs and US prosperity
The drug responsible for this miraculous reversal, Cisplatin, would never have been discovered without 'indirect funding' from the National Institutes of Health — resources used for all the essential services needed to support clinical studies.
Like Cisplatin, every groundbreaking cancer treatment you've ever heard of started the same way — not in a corporate boardroom, but in a university lab where NIH indirect funding pays the staff, keeps the computers humming, and medical equipment functioning.
All of this may abruptly end, given the Trump administration's plan to retroactively slash NIH indirect support to 15 percent of grants. For decades, research institutions have negotiated the rate with NIH, ranging between 25 to 70 percent.
This drastic cut will deter universities from accepting NIH research awards. Universities, including my own, often supplement NIH grants by more than two times the amount with their own institutional funds, and that is at the more generous negotiated rates.
It's clear that the administration's characterization of indirect costs as 'waste,' 'bureaucracy' or mere 'overhead' reflects a dangerous misunderstanding of the value of scientific research.
The NIH funds basic 'high-risk and pre-commercial research' that no private capital venture or pharmaceutical company would invest in due to the long horizon for finding cures. Across the board — from Alzheimer's disease to cancer and heart disease — NIH's funding of basic research has turned out to be a spectacularly successful investment.
NIH spurs awe-inspiring scientific breakthroughs and powers our economy. A recent study found that NIH supported 354 of 356 drugs approved from 2010 to 2019. That means that most of the lifesaving medications we take for granted today would not have been possible without the NIH.
It is estimated that every dollar in publicly funded basic research yields $8.38 after eight years. There are few government investments that can match the health and economic benefits of NIH funding.
Capping indirect funding will decimate biomedical research, which has been the engine of the U.S. economy and the envy of the world. This rash overreach will cost the jobs of thousands of highly trained researchers and those who support their work with little prospect for relocation or retraining. It will leave patients enrolled in clinical trials without access to the cutting-edge treatments already supported by their tax dollars.
This myopic decision, ostensibly made to save costs, will endanger our country's health, safety and prosperity.
What's more, the White House plan is flagrantly unlawful. NIH has existing contracts with 2,500 hospitals, medical institutions and universities in all 50 states. These are binding contracts that cannot be revoked without proof of violation and absent due process.
A basic principle of contract law is that contracts cannot be changed or rescinded retroactively. In fact, when the first Trump administration tried to do the same thing in 2017, Congress enacted specific protections for NIH-funded contracts.
The partnership between the federal government and a decentralized network of research universities has its origins in the Manhattan Project which had to rely on foreign-trained scientists. Insufficient scientific expertise became even more concerning in the 1960s after the Soviet Union's launch of the first satellite to orbit the Earth signaled that we were falling behind in the space race.
The response was to develop the current system: supporting universities to develop independent research capacities, rather than having all projects run out of Washington.
Our decentralized network of research universities is a vital component in driving scientific innovation and safeguarding our national security. Not only does our ability to train our own scientists make us self-sufficient, but it also provides a tremendous resource for the Department of Defense, which directs 50 percent of its basic research to universities.
By reliably supporting a consistent state of scientific readiness, our research network is able to pivot quickly towards addressing new threats, whether occurring naturally or a biological attack.
A federal court issued a temporary restraining order pausing the new rate cut in litigation filed by 22 state attorneys general. Universities and national academic associations just filed another lawsuit.
The ongoing litigation is likely to succeed, but the damage caused by this capricious and reckless action is immediate and devastating for medical centers across the country, which have already budgeted for (and incurred obligations based on) the specific indirect cost rates that have been negotiated and formalized with the NIH.
The NIH funding model has made the U.S. the world's science superpower and our universities the premier destination for students from every nation. Slashing NIH funding will not save money, but it will unravel a biomedical system that has powered our economy and protected our population for generations.
Congress stopped these dangerous cuts to NIH in 2017 and needs to hear scientists' voices again to protect medical research today and in the future.
Lawrence O. Gostin is a distinguished professor of Law at the O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University and Director of the World Health Organization Center on Global Health Law. Jennifer S. Bard is a professor of Law at the University of Cincinnati.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
9 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
President Trump ramps up takeover of Washington's police department. Here's what to know.
Why is Trump taking over the police in DC? The Republican president this week announced he's taking control over Washington's police department and activating National Guard troops to reduce crime, an escalation of his aggressive approach to law enforcement. But District of Columbia officials say the action isn't needed, pointing out that violent crime in the district reached historic 30-year lows last year and is down significantly again this year. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Can he do that? Advertisement D.C.'s status as a congressionally established federal district gives Trump a window to assert more control over the the district than other cities. D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser didn't offer much resistance at first, allowing city workers to clear homeless encampments and work closely with federal immigration agents. But on Friday, the heavily Democratic district asked for an emergency court order blocking Trump officials from putting a federal official in charge of D.C. police. So who is in charge of police in Washington? Right now, it's unsettled. Trump's administration announced Thursday that the head of the Drug Enforcement Administration will take over the police chief's duties, including authority over orders issued to officers. It's unclear where the move leaves the city's current police chief, Pamela Smith, who works for the mayor. Smith says upending the command structure would be a 'dangerous' threat to law and order. Advertisement What's at stake The showdown in Washington is the latest attempt by Trump to test the boundaries of his legal authority to carry out his tough-on-crime agenda, relying on obscure statutes and a supposed state of emergency to speed up the mass deportation of people in the United States illegally. What are the federal troops doing in DC? About 800 National Guard troops are being activated, with Humvees parked along the Washington Monument and near Union Station. Troops have been spotted standing outside baseball's Nationals Park and neighborhood restaurants. The White House says guard members aren't making arrests but are protecting law enforcement officers who are making arrests and helping deter violent crime. Trump says one of the objectives will be moving homeless people far from the city. How long can this go on? Trump has the authority to do this for 30 days and says he might look into extending it. But that would require congressional approval. Whether Republicans in Congress would go along with that is unclear. Some D.C. residents have protested against the increased police presence. For some, the action echoes uncomfortable historical chapters when politicians used language to paint predominantly Black cities with racist narratives to shape public opinion and justify police action. Will Trump try to take control in other US cities? Washington is very different from any other American city, and the rules that govern it give the federal government much more control than it would have anywhere else. Whether Trump is using this as a blueprint for how to approach cities — largely Democratic cities — that he wants to exert more control over remains to be seen. Advertisement


Boston Globe
9 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
Governor Newsom mocks Trump's social media stylings amid redistricting fight: ‘I'm following his example'
Newsom's press office even trolled Trump with what appeared to be an AI-generated Time magazine cover, showing the governor wearing a crown under the words 'LONG LIVE THE KING.' Advertisement A SUCCESSFUL LIBERATION DAY! THANK YOU! — Governor Newsom Press Office (@GovPressOffice) 'I'm following his example,' Newsom Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'To the extent it's gotten some attention, I'm pleased. But I think the deeper question is how have we allowed the normalization of his tweets, Truth Social posts, over the course of the last many years to go without similar scrutiny and notice' the California Democrat added. The satirical posts have come as a dispute over congressional redistricting unfolds between Democratic and Republican-led states. Newsom, a possible contender for the 2028 Democratic presidential nomination, urged Trump in a letter on Monday to halt the redistricting fight after the president called on Texas to draw a map favoring Republicans, giving him a 24-hour deadline. Advertisement 'FINAL WARNING DONALD TRUMP — MAYBE THE MOST IMPORTANT WARNING IN HISTORY! STOP CHEATING OR CALIFORNIA WILL REDRAW THE MAPS. AND GUESS WHO WILL ANNOUNCE IT THIS WEEK? GAVIN NEWSOM (MANY SAY THE MOST LOVED & HANDSOME GOVERNOR) AND A VERY POWERFUL TEAM. DON'T MAKE US DO IT!!! THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER,' the governor's press office On Wednesday, the governor said Trump missed his deadline by failing to respond to his letter. 'DONALD 'TACO' TRUMP, AS MANY CALL HIM, 'MISSED' THE DEADLINE!!! CALIFORNIA WILL NOW DRAW NEW, MORE 'BEAUTIFUL MAPS,' THEY WILL BE HISTORIC AS THEY WILL END THE TRUMP PRESIDENCY (DEMS TAKE BACK THE HOUSE!), the governor's press office At a news conference Thursday, Newsom said he would Outside the event, 'BORDER PATROL HAS SHOWED UP AT OUR BIG BEAUTIFUL PRESS CONFERENCE! WE WILL NOT BE INTIMIDATED!' his press office Alyssa Vega can be reached at


New York Post
9 minutes ago
- New York Post
DC woman goes viral after sharing she feels ‘more safe than ever' in capital after ‘Trump's law'
A DC resident has gone viral after saying she feels 'more safe than ever' following President Trump's crackdown on crime in the nation's capital. 'Finally able to chill at a red light with my windows down, not worried about if one of them young n—as is coming,' beaming TikTok user bigdawglexi said in the video, before sighing contentedly. 'Riding through the city, feeling more safe than I ever felt,' she said in the short clip, filmed inside her car at night. Advertisement 3 The woman filmed herself 'riding through the city, feeling more safe than I ever felt.' TikTok/bigdawglexi In a separate video, she said it had been 'real quiet in the city, real livable, real 'I like that,'' since the introduction of what she called 'Trump's Law.' Lexi describes herself as a Maryland-based nail tech, but appears to be wearing a police uniform in many of her videos. Advertisement A DC resident has gone viral after saying she feels 'more safe than ever' following President Trump's crackdown on crime in the nation's capital. Earlier this week, Trump launched a major crime crackdown in DC, with 1,000 National Guardsmen deployed to the city in response to high levels of disorder. 3 DC police detain a person on August 14, 2025 after President Trump's announcement of the federal takeover of the Metropolitan Police Department. REUTERS 3 Federal agents arrest a man outside New York Avenue Presbyterian Church on August 14, 2025 in Washington, DC. Getty Images More than 100 people have been arrested since the president assumed emergency control of the capital's police force.