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Billion dollar boost for US health research

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Health and science research would get a  billion-dollar boost under the 2012 budget proposed Monday by US President  Barack Obama, including a major new project to speed lab advances into cures.

The increase for the National Institutes of Health stood out in the overall  3.7 trillion dollar budget plan that would slash 90 billion dollars in  spending in 2012 and 1.1 trillion dollars over the next 10 years.    But it faces hefty opposition from Republican lawmakers who aim to trim a  billion dollars from the world’s largest public research institute as part of  other cuts to science and research they say are necessary as America faces a  1.65 trillion dollar deficit this year alone.    Leaders of the US government’s major health centers, well aware that the  budget faces a hostile Congress, sought to frame the Obama plan as a way of  doing more with less.

“New frontiers have the promise to unlock revolutionary treatments and  cures from diseases ranging from Alzheimer’s to cancer to autism,” said Health  and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.    “Our budget will allow the world’s leading scientists to pursue these  discoveries while keeping America at the forefront of biomedical research.”    Sebelius said that despite the 3.4 percent hike for NIH, other spending  cuts in government agencies resulted in an across-the-board budget that was  “slightly below 2010” levels.

“We have to figure out a way that existing resources actually not only  accomplish the earlier missions but also the new missions that have been given  to us over the past few years,” she told reporters.    Obama’s budget would also raise by 13 percent the annual budget for the  National Science Foundation, bringing it from 6.9 billion to 7.8 billion  dollars, and trim the Centers for Disease Control by 8.8 percent to 5.8  billion dollars.    CDC chief Thomas Frieden said his agency’s budget retooling was “complex”  and included new programs toward HIV/AIDS prevention in the United States and  global polio eradication as well as decreases in environmental and  occupational health.    Those adjustments, together with some internal restructuring, leave the  entire CDC at “about level” with its 2010 spending, he said.

NIH director Francis Collins said his agency will refocus its efforts to  bring laboratory discoveries more quickly to patients through a new  institution called the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences,  which has been estimated at around a billion dollars.    “There is a great deluge of opportunities right now in basic scientific  discoveries pointing us toward new potential therapeutics and the opportunity  to have a center that focuses on that has been an idea that many people  embrace both in the administration and both parties,” Collins said.    “This is going to be a new arrival on the NIH stage we hope by October,” he  said.    Another new effort is the Cures Acceleration Network, a 100 million dollar  plan to speed drug development that is included in the budget for the first  time.

Obama’s 2011 budget request was never enacted, and the US government has  been funded since 2010 by stop-gap spending measures.    A new one is needed by March 4, which Republicans hope will total 100  billion dollars in spending cuts over Obama’s 2011 proposal.    Jon Retzlaff, director of science policy at the American Association for  Cancer Research, said many researchers worried about the possibility that NIH  could be flat-funded by not receiving the billion dollar boost Obama wants.    “There is no question if there are not new dollars available it is very  difficult to begin any kind of new program or even to emphasize certain  programs,” Retzlaff told AFP.    “It is just concerning when there is so much momentum in the field right  now and so many exciting discoveries being made practically every day to think  that we are going to slow down this process.”

Washington, Feb 14, 2011 (AFP)

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