With the war on Iraq hanging over the nation last month, members of APA’s Academic Consortium urged their legislators on Capitol Hill to avoid making biomedical research a war-time funding casualty.
President Bush proposed only a 2 percent increase in the Fiscal 2004 budget for the National Institutes of Health, which is a sharp contrast to his Fiscal 2003 proposed budget increase of 16 percent, which Congress approved. APA and the Ad Hoc Group on Medical Research Funding played a role in nearly doubling the NIH budget between 1998 and last year and are advocating for a 10 percent increase in Fiscal 2004 to sustain that effort.
Bush proposed a budget increase of between 3 percent and 4 percent for the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), and the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), according to an APA Fiscal 2004 appropriations summary. Last fiscal year, Bush proposed between an 8 percent and 9 percent increase for each institute.
The NIMH is the primary source of research grants for psychiatrists who conduct mental health research at their local institutions, said APA President Paul Appelbaum, M.D., in an interview with Psychiatric News.
The NIMH last year reported a $1.3 billion research budget that provides support to investigators at universities in the areas of basic science, clinical research, including large-scale trials of new treatments, and studies of the organization and delivery of mental health services, according to a press release from NIMH.
Speakers at APA’s consortium—including co-chairs Lewis Judd, M.D., David Kupfer, M.D., and Appelbaum—complained that the president’s proposed Fiscal 2004 increases for NIMH, NIDA, and NIAAA barely kept up with inflation and would jeopardize funding of current and new research grants.
This year’s consortium was attended by slightly more than 40 people including representatives of the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill, American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ACNP), and American Association of Chairmen of Departments of Psychiatry (AACDP). This was the first time the ACNP and the AACDP were officially represented at the consortium.
Appelbaum told Psychiatric News at the consortium that he was concerned the president’s proposed budget for NIMH would further deter new clinical researchers from entering academia. “If the federal funding pipeline dries up, clinicians will view academic research careers as too risky financially to undertake especially when they have outstanding medical school debts and other financial obligations,” he said.
Judd and Kupfer exhorted consortium members to emphasize to their legislators on Capitol Hill the tremendous contribution NIH funding has made in translating research advances into psychiatric treatment. Kupfer reminded them to mention their own research projects and to contact their legislators throughout the year. ▪
Members of APA’s Academic Consortium meet with their congressional representatives in Washington, D.C., to persuade them that the National Institutes of Health deserves a 10 percent increase in Fiscal 2004.
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