The NIH Data Book (NDB) provides basic summary statistics on extramural grants and contract awards, grant applications, the organizations that NIH supports, the trainees and fellows supported through NIH programs, and the national biomedical workforce.
Consolidates all information about NIH-supported extramural organizations in a single tool.
Computed on a FY basis, success rates are defined by the percentage of applications funded and the total number of applications reviewed in various budget and grant activity categories.
Quick access to statistics from the NIH Data Book and annual reports produced by the NIH OER’s Division of Information Services. Ability to search statistics by topic, NIH IC’s, funding mechanism, activity code, type of award, or fiscal year.
The NIH funding data consists of an expansive reporting and information knowledge base. Located here are data on everything from success rates to historical NIH spending categories, from extramural grant and contract award statistics to NIH budget appropriations and levels of spending by budget mechanisms. A grantee is legally accountable for the performance and financial aspects of the grant-supported project or activity. The NIH is then responsible to the public for complete and accurate reporting of all results.
A product of the STAR METRICS initiative, Federal RePORTER provides detailed information on federally sponsored research including projects supported by the NIH, NSF, NASA, EPA, DOD, AHRQ, FDA, CDC, VA, and more.
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The NIH Budget and Spending reports provide information about the detailed estimates and justifications for research and research supported activities along with a comprehensive overview of official presentations.
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Categorical spending is derived from the RCDC computer-based process that sorts NIH-funded projects into categories of research area, disease, or condition.
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A list of NIH Institutes, Centers, and Offices Recovery Act Sites.
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Federally funded research is carried out by the government itself, or through grants to outside academic and research institutions. Government sponsored provides publicly shared results that can result in mass collaborative projects much beyond the scope of private researchers.
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The Office of Budget (OB) advises and supports the Director of the National Institutes of Health on budget policy issues affecting the NIH, the medical research community and the public.
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