UCSF Schools Lead Nation Again In NIH Biomedical Research Funds

By Kristen Bole | UCSF.edu | February 26, 2015

For the second year in a row, UC San Francisco’s four schools topped the nation in federal biomedical research funding in their fields in 2014, with the graduate-level university as a whole receiving the most of any public recipient and second most overall in funds from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), according to annual NIH figures.
 
These highly competitive funds, which totaled nearly $546.6 million at UCSF through contracts and grants combined, reflect the caliber of research on campus. Through the UCSF schools of dentistry, medicine, nursing and pharmacy, and the graduate division, these funds enable UCSF scientists to advance understanding of the underlying causes of cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, HIV, Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease, and others, and work to develop improved therapies for them.
 
NIH Funding 2014 “The projects these funds support at UCSF are driving advances in the biomedical sciences, from fundamental, curiosity-driven science to the application of those discoveries to patient care and populations, to training the next generation of scientists and health care professionals to carry those innovations forward,” said UCSF Chancellor Sam Hawgood, MBBS. “NIH funding is the lifeblood of that research and the heart of efforts by our faculty, staff, students and trainees to collectively transform health.”
 
The UCSF School of Medicine topped the list of NIH funding for medical schools for the third year in a row, at $480.6 million for fiscal year 2014, supporting research, graduate-student training and fellowships for postdoctoral scholars.
 
The UCSF schools of Pharmacy, Dentistry and Nursing also ranked first in their fields in NIH grants for 2014: Pharmacy for the 35th consecutive year, with $31.8 million in grants; Dentistry for the 23rd year, with $15.5 million; and Nursing for the 10th time in the last dozen years, with $10.1 million.
 
All told, UCSF received more than $538.1 million total in grants, with an additional $8.5 million in NIH contracts, for which UCSF scientists compete to perform specific research projects for the national institutes.
 
The rankings reflect UCSF’s expertise in research and education across multiple health-science arenas, as well as the size of the university’s $1.3 billion scientific enterprise. The funding, considered a strong indicator of the quality of an institution’s research, enables UCSF to deliver on its public mission of working to transform health worldwide, while generating more than $6.2 billion in economic benefit to the local economy through jobs, new companies and products, and direct health care to the San Francisco Bay Area and beyond.
 
Read more at UCSF.edu