March 22, 2002Contact:Mary Beth Reilly, [email protected]

Sally Pobojewski, [email protected]734-764-2220

For immediate release

U-M Medical School jumps to 8th nationally in FY2001 NIH grant rankings

ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- Biomedical researchers in the University of Michigan Medical School received a record $213 million in funding from the National Institutes of Health in federal fiscal year 2001, making the school eighth in the nation and third among public universities in total NIH grants. Last year, U-M Medical School was ranked number 10; this is the first time the school has achieved the eighth-ranked position.

In grant data recently released by the NIH, U-M Medical School grants increased 20.5 percent since fiscal year 2000, with 603 awards totaling $213 million. Of these grant allocations, 528 were for individual research awards -- the seventh-largest total in the nation for two consecutive years. Training grants, fellowships, research and development contracts and other awards also are included in the total funding figure. The Medical School has more than doubled its NIH funding over the past decade.

"We first entered the NIH top 10 tier in 1988, with $71 million in total support. Growth since then, including this year's jump to the number eight spot, is an indicator of our faculty's commitment to seeking visionary advances in scientific research," says Allen Lichter, M.D., dean of the U-M Medical School. "We're also proud to be the third-highest ranked in training grants because of our continuing commitment to professional education."

Not only do the NIH awards make up a majority of the Medical School's external funding, but they also comprise a significant percentage of NIH and total research funds awarded to the entire University. Medical School NIH awards account for more than 70 percent of the total $302.3 million in NIH funding to the U-M, helping to again make the University sixth in the nation in NIH awards to higher education institutions.

The National Institutes of Health are the nation's largest funding agency for biomedical research, and the amount of funding that a medical school receives is a major indicator of research activity. The NIH's list of research awards is available on its website: http://www.grants1.nih.gov/grants/award/rank/medttl.htm.

###

MEDIA CONTACT
Register for reporter access to contact details