Filtered By:
Management: Funding

This page shows you your search results in order of date. This is page number 20.

Order by Relevance | Date

Total 2110 results found since Jan 2013.

‘The Window is Closing’: White House Warns U.S. Faces New COVID-19 Risk Without More Shots
WASHINGTON (AP) — White House COVID-19 coordinator Dr. Ashish Jha issued a dire warning Thursday that the U.S. will be increasingly vulnerable to the coronavirus this fall and winter if Congress doesn’t swiftly approve new funding for more vaccines and treatments. In an Associated Press interview, Jha said Americans’ immune protection from the virus is waning, the virus is adapting to be more contagious and booster doses for most people will be necessary—with the potential for enhanced protection from a new generation of shots. His warning came as the White House said there could be up to 100 millio...
Source: TIME: Health - May 13, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: ZEKE MILLER / AP Tags: Uncategorized COVID-19 overnight wire Source Type: news

COVID Surges Could Infect 100 Million Americans Later This Year COVID Surges Could Infect 100 Million Americans Later This Year
The Biden administration ' s projections for later this year are part of a pitch to lawmakers for additional coronavirus funding.WebMD Health News
Source: Medscape Pulmonary Medicine Headlines - May 9, 2022 Category: Respiratory Medicine Tags: Infectious Diseases News Source Type: news

Coronavirus wave this fall and winter could potentially infect 100 million, White House warns
The Biden administration is issuing a new warning that the US could potentially see 100 million Covid-19 infections this fall and winter, as officials publicly stress the need for more funding... #thebiden #coronaviruswave
Source: Reuters: Health - May 7, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Coronavirus wave this fall could infect 100 million, administration warns
The projections for fall and winter are part of a pitch for additional funding for vaccines, treatments and tests.
Source: Washington Post: To Your Health - May 6, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Yasmeen Abutaleb Source Type: news

Tim Kaine Refuses to Let Long COVID Be an Afterthought
When Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine came down with a “blizzard” of allergy-like symptoms in March 2020, he blamed the layer of pollen coating his car. “It was Washington, D.C., in late March,” he says. I thought, “‘Okay, well, this is hay fever gone wild.’” Only when his wife, Anne Holton, developed “textbook” COVID-19 symptoms did Kaine start to wonder if he might have the new virus, the subject of the massive economic assistance bill—the CARES Act—that he and other lawmakers were then working to pass. Testing at that time was hard to come by, even for Hill...
Source: TIME: Health - May 4, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Jamie Ducharme Tags: Uncategorized COVID-19 feature Source Type: news

How Many Researchers: the FY 2021 Cumulative Investigator Rate
Our annual snapshot of how many researchers NIH supports is back. As with previous posts, the data presented here are also available in the NIH Data Book and represent awards made with traditional and supplemental coronavirus appropriations. The data are distinct from success rates, however, which are application-based metrics (see this post). Our cumulative investigator rate is an NIH-wide person-based metric. The metric is calculated as the number of unique principal investigators who were designated on an NIH Research Project Grant (RPG), activity or mechanism, divided by the number of unique principal investigators who...
Source: NIH Extramural Nexus - May 3, 2022 Category: Research Authors: Mike Lauer Tags: blog Open Mike cumulative investigator rate Funding data funding rate Source Type: funding

Notice of Special Interest: Research on Alcohol and Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) within the Mission of NIAAA
Notice NOT-AA-22-012 from the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts
Source: NIH Funding Opportunities (Notices, PA, RFA) - April 29, 2022 Category: Research Source Type: funding

COVID-19 Induced Psychosis in Patients with Underlying Mental Health Disorder: Case Report
We present a case of a 23-year-old female, with a history of anxiety and depression who presents with psychosis and mania after contracting 2019 novel coronavirus. The patient was asymptomatic for the infection. The purpose of this case report is to highlight the fact that COVID-19 can increase the risk of mania and new-onset psychosis in patients with a previous psychiatric history.FUNDING: No funding.PMID:35477619 | DOI:10.1017/S1092852922000530
Source: CNS Spectrums - April 28, 2022 Category: Neurology Authors: Narmada Neerja Bhimanadham Ornela Ali Asghar Hossain Source Type: research

Biden Administration Is Making the COVID-19 Antiviral Pill Paxlovid Easier to Get
(Washington D.C.) — President Joe Biden’s administration is taking steps to expand availability of the life-saving COVID-19 antiviral treatment Paxlovid, as it seeks to reassure doctors that there is ample supply for people at high risk of severe illness or death from the virus. Paxlovid, produced by Pfizer, was first approved in December. Supply of the regimen was initially very limited, but as COVID-19 cases across the country have fallen and manufacturing has increased it is now far more abundant. The White House is now moving to raise awareness of the pill and taking steps to make it easier to access. [time...
Source: TIME: Health - April 26, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Zeke Miller / AP Tags: Uncategorized COVID-19 healthscienceclimate Source Type: news

Biden Launches $6B Effort to Save Distressed Nuclear Plants
The Biden administration is launching a $6 billion effort to rescue nuclear power plants at risk of closing, citing the need to continue nuclear energy as a carbon-free source of power that helps to combat climate change. A certification and bidding process opened Tuesday for a civil nuclear credit program that is intended to bail out financially distressed owners or operators of nuclear power reactors, the U.S. Department of Energy told The Associated Press exclusively, shortly before the official announcement. It’s the largest federal investment in saving financially distressed nuclear reactors. Owners or operators...
Source: TIME: Science - April 20, 2022 Category: Science Authors: JENNIFER McDERMOTT and MATTHEW DALY / AP Tags: Uncategorized climate change Climate Is Everything energy wire Source Type: news

Breast cancer in India: Present scenario and the challenges ahead
World J Clin Oncol. 2022 Mar 24;13(3):209-218. doi: 10.5306/wjco.v13.i3.209.ABSTRACTBreast cancer is the commonest malignancy among women globally. From being fourth in the list of most common cancers in India during the 1990s, it has now become the first. In this review, we examine the available literature to understand the factors that contributed to the high burden of breast cancer in the country. We also provide the landscape of changes in the field of early diagnosis and the treatment modalities as well as the limitations of the Indian healthcare delivery systems (e.g., delayed diagnosis, human resources and funding f...
Source: Clinical Genitourinary Cancer - April 18, 2022 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Ravi Mehrotra Kavita Yadav Source Type: research

As COVID-Era Restrictions End, Disabled Americans Want to Avoid a ‘Return to Normal’
President Joe Biden hired Kim Knackstedt in early 2021 to make sure that Americans with disabilities were not forgotten as the country returned to normal after the COVID-19 pandemic. A year later, that seems to be precisely what has happened—and it’s unfortunate, Knackstedt says. “What was considered ‘normal’ was actually not a great way to live, often,” says Knackstedt, who served as the first White House director of disability policy, before leaving the administration on March 11. “It wasn’t accessible. It actually didn’t provide all of the things that we needed to ge...
Source: TIME: Health - April 15, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Abigail Abrams Tags: Uncategorized COVID-19 Source Type: news