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NIH Working Group on Basic Behavioral and Social
Science Research Reports at Advisory Committee Meeting
The Advisory Committee of the Director of NIH heard a
presentation December 2, 2004, on the recently released draft report of the NIH
Working Group on Basic Behavioral and Social Sciences Research. Working Group
members Susan Fiske, Robert Levenson, and Bruce McEwen, along with chair Linda
Waite, presented the draft report and its recommendations to the NIH Director
and his advisory committee. The Working Group was established in 2003 by NIH
Director Elias Zerhouni with the charge to review the portfolio of basic
behavioral and social science research funded by NIH and to make recommendations
on how to strengthen basic research.
The Working Group released an inventory of basic behavioral and
social research in each of the NIH institutes that reported supporting it, with
titles of some grants shown as examples. It also released a report with
recommendations on how to strengthen basic research. Those recommendations were:
1) Task the NIH Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research (OBSSR) with
coordinating trans-institute basic research initiatives, and 2) to designate a
home for basic research that is not differentiated by disease by establishing a
branch or a program in a non-categorical institute (either the National
Institute of General Medical Sciences, which funds basic research; the National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development; or the National Institute on
Aging).
While the latter recommendation technically overreached the
group’s charge, Waite explained to the Advisory Council that undifferentiated
basic research needs a home at NIH, especially now that the National Institute
of Mental Health (NIMH) is refocusing its research portfolio toward
translational research. Several NIH institutes support basic research, but even
though basic questions are being addressed, they are often posed in populations
reflecting, or within the context of, the disease mission of those institutes.
Waite characterized the first recommendation as encouraging basic research in a
“top-down” approach, through Requests for Applications, and the second as a
means to provide a stable home where investigator-initiated basic research would
be welcomed.
Zerhouni and the advisory committee expressed several concerns
about the second recommendation. Some advisory committee members asked why NSF
was not the more appropriate home for this type of basic behavioral and social
science research. Zerhouni noted the tightening budgets at NIH and appeared to
question why he or the advisory council ought to dictate to any institute what
sort of research it should fund. He didn’t question the importance of the
research, but noted that the amount of basic research tallied in the report,
approximately $936 million, was not an insignificant amount of money. The
Working Group members noted that the inventory they developed showed that almost
all examples of basic research included in the $936 million were projects posed
within the context of the disease missions of the institutes. The challenge in
the meeting was to explain why undifferentiated basic behavioral and social
science was as relevant to health as, for example, undifferentiated research on
cellular function.
The presenters attempted to answer the concerns posed by
Zerhouni and other members of the Advisory Council. Fiske pointed out that there
is a strong body of research on how lack of social support adversely affects
cardiac patients. While NIH has supported this applied research, she questioned
whether today’s NIH would support basic research on social isolation and
social support that made the clinical research possible.
Even if the reception by the Advisory Committee was more
tentative than hoped, APA and other organizations will share the Working Group’s
recommendations with congressional allies and discuss them with individual
institutes to see if a more welcoming climate can be established for basic
behavioral and social sciences research at NIH. In that regard, Reps. Brian
Baird (D-WA) and Patrick Kennedy (D-RI) recently wrote to Raynard Kington, MD,
PhD, Deputy Director of NIH, asking for information about progress on this
issue. Their letter can be seen here.
Their interest in basic behavioral and social sciences research has been
instrumental in the actions NIH has taken to date. While the report is still in
draft form now, the Director’s Advisory Committee is expected to discuss its
approval before the committee’s next meeting in June 2005.
Read
the draft report and inventory [PDF 700K]
More
information on the Membership of the NIH Director's Advisory
Committee and the Charge to the
Working Group on Basic Behavioral and Social Sciences Research
Read
letter from Representatives Baird and Kennedy to NIH Deputy Director Raynard
Kington [PDF 80K]
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