On Friday, the NIH announced it would immediately set a 15% cap on “indirect” funding that institutions receive as part of research grants. These funds pay for building maintenance, supplies, support staff and other administrative expenses tied to conducting research,
Oregon’s U.S. Senators Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden joined an effort led by Washington State’s U.S. Senator Patty Murray in expressing serious alarm over the Trump Administration’s threats to cut
OHSU's Steve Stadum talks about facing an uncertain federal funding landscape, and author Shari Dunn discusses misconceptions about the intentions of DEI policy.
Leaders in Oregon say proposed cuts by the Trump Administration to the National Institutes of Health would ravage funding to develop urgently needed treatments for fatal conditions like cancer and heart and neurodegenerative disease.
After the Senate passed the vote to appoint Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as the Secretary of Health and Human Servies, Oregon U.S. Senators Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden joined an
Tina Kotek and newly elected Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield have vowed to resist Trump’s changes on everything from health care to immigration, and in recent days they’ve joined attorneys general from numerous states to sue the Trump administration over numerous directives.
Oregon medical researchers and three Democratic members of Oregon’s congressional delegation warned that the Trump administration’s efforts to curtail funding will hamper the ability of the state’s science community to do groundbreaking research that can save lives and advance health care.
Salmon “is like candy to Natives,” said Christina White, the co-owner of Native Candy. Read online: One of the high-profile bills under consideration in the Oregon legislature this session is a move to change the rules regarding involuntary mental health treatment for people suffering with mental illness.
Leading members of Oregon’s Congressional delegation and scientists at Oregon Health & Science University said Friday a proposed Trump administration rule would gut critical medical research. The Feb.
Oregon medical researchers and three Democratic members of Oregon’s congressional delegation warned that the Trump administration’s efforts to curtail funding will hamper the ability of the state’s science community to do groundbreaking research that can save lives and advance health care.
Oregon medical researchers and three Democratic members of Oregon’s congressional delegation warned that the Trump Administration’s efforts to curtail funding will hamper the ability of the state’s sc