Note an Addendum to NIAID’s Financial Management Plan for FY 2025
For competing investigator-initiated R01 applications submitted by new and early-stage investigators, NIAID will fund new awards at their approved funding level (without any percentage reduction). At the outset of fiscal year (FY) 2025, we had not identified this subset of applications as excluded from our approach of funding competing investigator-initiated awards at 97 percent of approved funding level.
Read our FY 2025 Financial Management Plan for additional details. Refer also to Information for New Investigators.
HHS ASPR Posts FAQs on DURC/PEPP Policy
We noted, in our June 5, 2024 news brief “New Government-Wide Policy for Dual Use Research of Concern and Pathogens with Enhanced Pandemic Potential in May 2025,” that a new Policy for Oversight of Dual Use Research of Concern and Pathogens with Enhanced Pandemic Potential would expand the scope of research requiring additional scrutiny and strengthen government coordination with institutions to ensure robust review and oversight.
Our preparation for the May 6, 2025 implementation date is ongoing. Until then, HHS’s Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response is posting (and answering) frequently asked questions (FAQs) about the policy from the research community. Find them at Frequently Asked Questions: United States Government Policy for Oversight of Dual Use Research of Concern and Pathogens with Enhanced Pandemic Potential.
The government has made ASPRBIO@hhs.gov available for questions and feedback from stakeholders on interpreting or implementing the Policy. Feedback will be used for policy evaluation purposes and may result in FAQs. Not all emails to this email address may receive a direct response.
New Scientific Integrity Policies Focus on Public Trust
In recent months, HHS and NIH have each announced new policies for scientific integrity. Read NIH’s announcement at Final Scientific Integrity Policy of the National Institutes of Health. Note that this is in addition to NIH policies on Research Integrity, which champion trustworthy and professional conduct, methodology, and results reporting within NIH-supported research.
Per the announcement, the new Scientific Integrity Policy is meant to ensure that 1) scientific findings are objective, credible, and readily available to the public, and 2) the development and implementation of policies and programs is transparent, accountable, and evidence-based. Practically speaking, the policy is meant to govern NIH and its staff, rather than the extramural community.