NIH restarts bat virus grant suspended 3 years ago by Trump
Three years after then-President Donald Trump pressured the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to suspend a research grant to a U.S. group studying bat coronaviruses with partners in China, the agency has restarted the award.
The new 4-year grant is a stripped-down version of the original grant to the EcoHealth Alliance, a nonprofit research organization in New York City, providing $576,000 per year. That 2014 award included funding for controversial experiments that mixed parts of different bat viruses related to severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), the coronavirus that sparked a global outbreak in 2002–04, and included a subaward to the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV). The new award omits those studies, and also imposes extensive new accounting rules on EcoHealth, which drew criticism from government auditors for its bookkeeping practices.
But EcoHealth’s
embattled
director, Peter Daszak, says his group is pleased: “Now we have the ability to finally get back to work,” he says.
After NIH
halted
the grant in April 2020, many scientists protested the move as political interference with scientific peer review. Now, they are welcoming the grant’s resumption. “It is long overdue. Unfortunately, the original cancellation reflects the ongoing partisan politics where first Trump and now many Republicans are attacking science unfairly,” says Nobel Prize winner Richard Roberts of New England Biolabs. In May 2020, he helped o...
Source: ScienceNOW - Category: Science Source Type: news
More News: Allergy | Allergy & Immunology | American Health | Biology | China Health | Computers | Coronavirus | COVID-19 | Funding | Government | Grants | Infectious Diseases | Microbiology | Molecular Biology | National Institutes of Health (NIH) | Outbreaks | Pandemics | Politics | Respiratory Medicine | SARS | Science | Singapore Health | Study | Trump | USA Health | Virology