logo
#

Latest news with #DEIA

World's premier cancer institute faces crippling cuts and chaos under Trump administration
World's premier cancer institute faces crippling cuts and chaos under Trump administration

San Francisco Chronicle​

time09-07-2025

  • Health
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

World's premier cancer institute faces crippling cuts and chaos under Trump administration

The Trump administration's broadsides against scientific research have caused unprecedented upheaval at the National Cancer Institute, the storied federal government research hub that has spearheaded advances against the disease for decades. NCI, which has long benefited from enthusiastic bipartisan support, now faces an exodus of clinicians, scientists, and other staffers — some fired, others leaving in exasperation. After years of accelerating progress that has reduced cancer deaths by a third since the 1990s, the institute has terminated funds nationwide for research to fight the disease, expand care and train new oncologists. 'We use the word 'drone attack' now regularly,' one worker said of grant terminations. 'It just happens from above.' The assault could well result in a perceptible slowing of progress in the fight against cancer. Nearly 2 million Americans are diagnosed with malignancies every year. In 2023, cancer killed more than 613,000 people, making it the second-leading cause of death after heart disease. But the cancer fight has also made enormous progress. Cancer mortality in the U.S. has fallen by 34% since 1991, according to the American Cancer Society. There are roughly 18 million cancer survivors in the country. That trend 'we can very, very closely tie to the enhanced investment in cancer science by the U.S. government,' said Karen Knudsen, CEO of the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy and a globally recognized expert on prostate cancer. 'We're winning,' Knudsen said. 'Why we would let up, I really don't understand.' 'It's horrible. It's a crap show. It really, really is,' said an NCI laboratory chief who has worked at the institute for three decades. He's lost six of the 30 people in his lab this year: four scientists, a secretary, and an administrator. 'If we survive I will be somewhat surprised,' he said. After a mandate by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Government Efficiency to slash contract spending by more than a third, the cancer institute is cutting contracts to maintain precious biological specimens used in its research, according to three scientists. 'The required contract cuts are going to be devastating,' a senior scientist said. On the NCI campus in Bethesda, Maryland, scientists describe delays in getting essential supplies — 'literally anything that goes into a test tube or a petri dish,' a recently departed clinician said — because of staffing cuts and constant changes in policies about what they can order. Even the websites that publish new evidence on cancer treatment and diagnosis aren't being updated, because HHS fired workers who managed them. And when NCI scientists do communicate with outsiders, what they say has been severely restricted, according to documents viewed by KFF Health News. Forbidden topics include mass firings, President Donald Trump's executive orders, and 'DEIA' – diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility. The turmoil at the National Institutes of Health's largest arm could haunt the country and the world for years to come. 'I really, really don't understand what they're trying to achieve,' said Sarah Kobrin, chief of NCI's health systems and interventions research branch. 'It just doesn't make sense.' 'Efforts that are lifesaving now are being curtailed,' one scientist said. 'People will die.' Years of bipartisan support Initially, some workers said, they thought the cancer institute might be spared. HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has called chronic disease — cancer is one — ' an existential threat ' to the country. Cancer research, with multiple NCI-funded breakthroughs in genetics and immunotherapy, has sidestepped the political minefields around other public health issues, like vaccination. 'People who care about cancer might be the biggest lobby in the country,' said Paul Goldberg, editor and publisher of The Cancer Letter, which has monitored oncology science and policy since 1973. Count Mike Etchamendy, 69, of Big Bear Lake in San Bernardino County as part of that lobby. Since 2013 he's flown to the East Coast scores of times to participate in five clinical trials at the cancer wing of NIH's Clinical Center. 'They call it the House of Hope,' Etchamendy said. Between drugs, therapeutic vaccines, and expert treatment for his rare bone cancer, called chordoma, he said, he believes he's gained at least 10 years of life. He's proud to have served as a 'lab rat for science' and worries about NCI's future. 'People come from all over the world to learn there,' Etchamendy said. 'You cut funding there, you're going to cut major research on cancer.' In response to a list of detailed questions from KFF Health News about the cuts and chaos at NCI, HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon said the reporting amounted to a 'biased narrative' that 'misrepresents a necessary transformation at the National Cancer Institute.' Nixon declined to elaborate but said research into cancer and other health conditions continues to be a high priority 'for both NIH and HHS.' 'We are refocusing resources on high-impact, evidence-based research — free from ideological bias or institutional complacency. While change can be uncomfortable for those invested in the status quo, it is essential to ensure that NCI delivers on its core mission,' he said. Much of NCI's work is authorized by the National Cancer Act of 1971, which expanded its mandate as part of President Richard Nixon's 'War on Cancer.' Three of four of the cancer institute's research dollars go to outside scientists, with most of the remainder funding more than 300 scientists on campus. And Congress was generous. Harold Varmus, one of more than 40 Nobel laureates whose work was funded by NCI, said budgets were usually handsome when he was NIH director from 1993 through 1999. President Bill Clinton 'would say to me, 'I'd like to give you a bigger increase, Harold, but your friends in Congress will bring it up.' He'd offer me a 5% increase,' Varmus recalled, but 'I'd end up getting more like 10%' from Congress. Congress appropriated $2 billion to NCI in fiscal 1993. By 2025, funding had risen to $7.22 billion. 'Scrubbing of science' During a May 19 town hall meeting with NIH staff members, Jay Bhattacharya, the institute's new director, equivocated when asked about funding cuts for research into improving the health of racial and ethnic minorities — cuts made under the guise of purging DEI from the government. According to a recording of the meeting obtained by KFF Health News, Bhattacharya said the agency remained 'absolutely committed to advancing the health and well-being of every population, including minority populations, LGBTQ populations, and every population.' Research addressing the health needs of women and minorities is 'an absolute priority of mine,' he said. 'We're going to keep funding that.' But a study considering whether 'structural racism causes poor health in minority populations' is 'not a scientific hypothesis.' 'We need scientific ideas that are actionable, that improve the health and well-being of people, not ideological ideas that don't have any chance of improving the health and well-being of people,' he said. That comment angered many staffers, several said in interviews. Many got up and walked out during the speech, while others, watching remotely, scoffed or jeered. Several current and former NCI scientists questioned Bhattacharya's commitment to young scientists and minorities. Staffing cuts early in the year eliminated many recently hired NCI scientists. At least 172 National Cancer Institute grants, including for research aimed at minimizing health disparities among racial minorities or LGBTQ+ people, were terminated and hadn't been reinstated as of June 16, according to a KFF Health News analysis of HHS documents and a list of grant terminations by outside researchers. Those populations have higher rates of certain cancer diagnoses and are more likely to receive diagnoses later than white or heterosexual people. Black people are also more likely to die of many cancer types than all other racial and ethnic groups. Jennifer Guida, a researcher who focuses on accelerated aging in cancer survivors, said she recently left NCI after a decade in part because of the administration's DEI orders. According to several workers and internal emails viewed by KFF Health News, those included an HHS edict in January to report their colleagues who worked on such issues, and flagging grants that included DEI-related terms because they didn't align with Trump's priorities. 'I'm not going to put my name attached to that. I don't stand for that. It's not OK,' said Guida, who added that it amounted to a 'scrubbing of science.' Racial discrimination is one factor that contributes to accelerated aging. 'There are a growing number of cancer survivors in the U.S.,' Guida said, and 'a significant number of those people who will become cancer survivors are racial and ethnic minorities.' 'Those people deserve to be studied,' she said. 'How can you help those people if you're not even studying them?' In May, NCI informed leaders of the Comprehensive Partnerships to Advance Cancer Health Equity, a program that links 14 large U.S. cancer centers with minority-serving colleges and universities, that their funding would be cut. The project's Notice of Funding Opportunity — the mechanism the government uses to award grants — had been suddenly taken offline, meaning NCI staffers couldn't award future funding, according to three sources and internal communications viewed by KFF Health News. These 'unpublishings' have often occurred without warning, explanation, or even notification of the grantee that no more money would be coming. The cancer partnerships have trained more than 8,500 scientists. They're designed to address widely documented disparities in cancer care by having top medical schools place students from rural, poor, and minority-serving schools and community clinics in research, training, and outreach. Research shows that patients from racial and ethnic minorities receive better medical care and have improved outcomes when their clinicians share their background. 'I'm from an immigrant family, the first to graduate in my family,' said Elena Martinez, a professor of family medicine and public health at the University of California-San Diego, who leads one of the partnerships with colleagues at largely Hispanic Cal State-San Diego. 'I wouldn't be here without this kind of program, and there won't be people like me here in the future if we cut these programs.' Silencing the science communicators In early April, when the dust settled after mass firings across HHS, workers in NCI's communications office were relieved they still had their jobs. It didn't last. A month later, HHS fired nearly all of them, three former workers said. Combined with retirements and other departures, a skeleton crew of six or seven remain of about 75 people. 'We were all completely blindsided,' a fired worker said. NCI leadership 'had no idea that this was happening.' As a result, websites, newsletters, and other resources for patients and doctors about the latest evidence in cancer treatment aren't being updated. They include and NCI's widely used Physician Data Query, which compile research findings that doctors turn to when caring for cancer patients. Gary Kreps, founding director of the Center for Health and Risk Communication at George Mason University, said he relied on Physician Data Query when his father was diagnosed with advanced stomach cancer, taking PDQ printouts when he met with his dad's doctors. 'It made a huge difference,' Kreps said. 'He ended up living, like, another three years' — longer than expected — 'and enjoyed the rest of his life.' As of May 30, banners at the top of the and PDQ websites said, 'Due to HHS restructuring and reduction in workforce efforts, the information on this website may not be up to date and pages will indicate as such.' The banners are gone, but neither website was being updated, according to a fired worker with knowledge of the situation. Outdated PDQ information is 'really very dangerous,' Kreps said. Wiping out NCI's communications staff makes it harder to share complex and ever-changing information that doctors and patients need, said Peter Garrett, who headed NCI's communications before retiring in May. Garrett said he left because of concerns about political interference. 'The science isn't finished until it's communicated,' he said. 'Without the government playing that role, who's going to step in?' A budget to 'destroy clinical research' Following court decisions that blocked some NIH grant cancellations or rendered them 'void' and 'illegal,' NIH official Michelle Bulls in late June told staffers to stop terminating grants. However, NCI workers told KFF Health News they continue to review grants flagged by NIH to assess whether they align with Trump administration priorities. Courts have ordered NIH to reinstate some terminated grants, but not all of them. At NCI and across NIH, staffers remain anxious. The White House wants Congress to slash the cancer institute's budget by nearly 40%, to $4.53 billion, as part of a larger proposal to sharply reduce NIH's fiscal 2026 coffers. Bhattacharya has said he wants NIH to fund more big, breakthrough research. Major cuts could have the opposite effect, Knudsen said. When NCI funding shrinks, 'it's the safe science that tends to get funded, not the science that is game changing and has the potential to be transformative for cures.' Usually the president's budget is dead on arrival in Congress, and members of both parties have expressed doubt about Trump's 2026 proposal. But agency workers, outside scientists, and patients fear this one may stick, with devastating impact. It would force NCI to suspend all new grants or cut existing grants so severely that the gaps will close many labs, said Varmus, who ran NCI from 2010 to 2015. Add that to the impact on NCI's contracts, clinical trials, internal research, and salaries, he said, and 'you can reliably say that NCI will be unable to keep up in any way with the promise of science that's currently underway.' The NCI laboratory chief, who has worked at the institute for decades, put it this way: 'If the 40% budget cut passes in Congress, it will destroy clinical research at NCI.'

One for the Books: Playing the game's half the fun in books that make you put the pieces together
One for the Books: Playing the game's half the fun in books that make you put the pieces together

Chicago Tribune

time26-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Chicago Tribune

One for the Books: Playing the game's half the fun in books that make you put the pieces together

Level up your summer reading list with this Amazing Book Challenge category: Are You Game? Whether you're a fan of board games, puzzles, crosswords or video games, this game-themed book list has something for every kind of player. Dive into stories where games aren't just pastimes, they're the heart of the adventure, the key to mystery or the path to unexpected friendships. Choose your title, roll the dice and get ready to play! To see the full list of recommendations and other Amazing Book Challenge categories, go to If you're always looking for that last missing piece, try 'The Fellowship of Puzzlemakers' by Samuel Burr. Abandoned at birth on the steps of the Fellowship of Puzzlemakers, Clayton was raised by a group of eccentric enigmatologists and now finds himself among the last survivors of a fading institution. When the esteemed crossword compiler and main maternal presence in Clayton's life passes away, she bestows her final puzzle on him: a promise to reveal the mystery of his parentage and prepare him for life beyond the walls of the commune. If you're a gamer girl, try 'Game On' by Seressia Glass. Samara Reynolds, a gamer and DEIA consultant, sparks an online movement after critiquing the game Legendsfall and its company, Artemis Games. Unexpectedly, she receives a job offer from Aron Galanis, Artemis's CEO, who's striving to make the company more inclusive. Tasked with improving the game's character options, their partnership evolves from rivals to friends and then something more. But when their relationship goes public, will they survive the fallout or face game over? If you're a reality tv show junkie, try 'Everyone Is Watching' by Heather Gudenkauf. Five contestants have been chosen to compete for $10 million on the game show One Lucky Winner. The catch? None of them knows what (or who) to expect, and it will be live streamed all over the world. When long-kept secrets begin to rise to the surface, the contestants realize this is no longer just a reality show — someone is out for blood. And the game can't end until the world knows who the contestants really are. If you've always got dibs on Professor Plum, try 'Board to Death' by CJ Connor. Ben Rosencrantz runs his family's board game shop but struggles to get his life to pass go, much less collect $200. When a local game collector, Clive, offers him a rare edition of The Landlord's Game at a suspiciously low price, Ben declines. Then Clive is found dead at Ben's door, along with a backpack of cash. Now the prime suspect, Ben must clear his name and find the real killer—or face jail for murder. And no amount of double dice rolls will set him free… If your ideal Saturday night is being trapped in a themed room with friends, try 'Escape Room' by Maren Stoffels. Told from multiple viewpoints, Alissa, Sky, Mint and Miles enter an Escape Room with one hour to find clues, crack codes and solve puzzles. But what will happen when the Game Master has no intention of letting them out… If you have a killer card game, try 'Cards on the Table' by Agatha Christie. Mr. Shaitana is famous as a flamboyant party host. Nevertheless, he is a man of whom everybody is a little afraid. So, when he boasts to Hercule Poirot that he considers murder an art form, the detective has some reservations about accepting a party invitation to view Shaitana's 'private collection.' Indeed, what begins as an absorbing evening of bridge is to turn into a more dangerous game altogether.… If you like a little word play, try 'Queen of the Tiles' by Hanna Alkaf. When Najwa Bakri walks into her first Scrabble competition since her best friend Trina's death, it's to heal and move on with her life. With Trina, the Scrabble Queen herself, gone, the Scrabble throne is empty and her friends are eager to be the next reigning champion. All's fair in love and Scrabble, but all bets are off when Trina's formerly inactive Instagram starts posting again. Its cryptic messages suggest that maybe Trina's death wasn't as straightforward as everyone thought. And maybe someone at the competition had something to do with it. If you have an extreme collection of dice, try 'Dungeons and Drama' by Kristy Boyce. Musical lover Riley has big aspirations to become a director on Broadway. But when Riley takes her mom's car without permission, she's grounded and stuck with the worst punishment: spending her after-school hours working at her dad's game shop. Riley can't waste her time working, so she convinces Nathan — a nerdy teen employee — to cover her shifts and, in exchange, she'll flirt with him to make his gamer-girl crush jealous. Soon, Riley starts to think that flirting with Nathan doesn't require as much acting as she would've thought.

Roy Wood Jr. knocks White House, CNN at Peabody Awards
Roy Wood Jr. knocks White House, CNN at Peabody Awards

The Hill

time02-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Hill

Roy Wood Jr. knocks White House, CNN at Peabody Awards

Comedian Roy Wood Jr. on Sunday went after the White House and CNN at the Peabody Awards, according to a report from The Hollywood Reporter. 'Last year's host was Kumail Nanjiani, so that is back-to-back years with a minority host. The Peabodys standing up for diversity, how about that?' Wood said during the event, according to The Hollywood Reporter. 'Which means in a few months, the White House will cut their funding and so they'll have John Mulaney, that's on y'all,' he added, according to the outlet, appearing to reference the Trump administration's recent attempts to target diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) efforts. Back in January, President Trump issued an expansive executive order stating that 'illegal DEI and DEIA policies not only violate the text and spirit of our longstanding Federal civil-rights laws, they also undermine our national unity.' The president added that the policies 'deny, discredit, and undermine the traditional American values of hard work, excellence, and individual achievement in favor of an unlawful, corrosive, and pernicious identity-based spoils system.' According to its website, the Peabody Awards does not have any 'set criteria for judging the winners,' but 'recognize stories that illuminate social issues with depth and complexity as much as stories that entertain and inspire through their art or voice' in fields including streaming, television, digital media and radio. Wood also seemingly referenced the recently released book 'Original Sin: President Biden's Decline, Its Cover-up, and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again,' by his CNN colleague Jake Tapper and Axios's Alex Thompson, according to The Hollywood Reporter. 'It's hard to create stuff about terrible things without knowing all of the terrible things. It's hard — that's why I quit 'The Daily Show,' it was too much stress.' Wood, the host of CNN's 'Have I Got News For You,' said, per the report. 'I work at CNN now, I ain't got to do nothing but plug Jake Tapper's book.' The Hill has reached out to the White House and CNN for comment.

16 states sue over research grant cuts
16 states sue over research grant cuts

Yahoo

time29-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

16 states sue over research grant cuts

Attorneys general from 16 states filed a lawsuit Thursday against the Trump administration's cuts to research grants funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). Earlier this month, the NSF said it would no longer reimburse indirect costs for research exceeding 15 percent. The move comes after an April announcement that struck more than $200 million in funds for studies exploring diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility (DEIA) in addition to misinformation. The coalition of states says that a federal law requires the NSF to increase the 'participation of women and underrepresented minorities' in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). 'This administration's attacks on basic science and essential efforts to ensure diversity in STEM will weaken our economy and our national security,' New York Attorney General Letitia James (D) said in a statement regarding the lawsuit. 'Putting politics over science will only set our country back, and I will continue to fight to protect critical scientific research and education,' she added. California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Wisconsin, and Washington are each listed as plaintiffs in the legal battle. The NSF did not immediately respond to The Hill's request for comment on the legal challenge. The states' lawsuit comes as a group of 13 schools sued the NSF over slated changes. 'Research projects with more narrow impact limited to subgroups of people based on protected class or characteristics do not effectuate NSF priorities. NSF will continue to support research with the goal of understanding or addressing participation in STEM, in accordance with all applicable statutes and mandates, with the core goal of creating opportunities for all Americans,' the foundation wrote in an April statement. 'NSF will continue to support basic and use-inspired research in S&E fields that focus on protected characteristics when doing so is intrinsic to the research question and is aligned with Agency priorities,' it added. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

16 states sue over research grant cuts
16 states sue over research grant cuts

The Hill

time29-05-2025

  • Politics
  • The Hill

16 states sue over research grant cuts

Attorneys general from 16 states filed a Thursday lawsuit against the Trump administration's cuts to research grants funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). Earlier this month, the NSF said it would no longer reimburse indirect costs for research exceeding 15 percent. The move comes after an April announcement that struck more than $200 million in funds for studies exploring Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility (DEIA) in addition to misinformation. The coalition of states says that a federal law requires the NSF to increase the 'participation of women and underrepresented minorities' in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). 'This administration's attacks on basic science and essential efforts to ensure diversity in STEM will weaken our economy and our national security,' New York Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement on the lawsuit. 'Putting politics over science will only set our country back, and I will continue to fight to protect critical scientific research and education,' she added. Alongside New York, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Wisconsin, and Washington are each listed as plaintiffs in the legal battle. The NSF did not immediately respond to The Hill's request for comment on the legal challenge. The state's lawsuit comes as a group of 13 schools sued the NSF over slated changes. 'Research projects with more narrow impact limited to subgroups of people based on protected class or characteristics do not effectuate NSF priorities. NSF will continue to support research with the goal of understanding or addressing participation in STEM, in accordance with all applicable statutes and mandates, with the core goal of creating opportunities for all Americans,' the foundation wrote in an April statement. 'NSF will continue to support basic and use-inspired research in S&E fields that focus on protected characteristics when doing so is intrinsic to the research question and is aligned with Agency priorities,' it adds.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store