
FY21 Budget Outlook: National Institutes of Health
The National Institutes of Health would continue its recent string of multi-billion dollar budget increases
Republican appropriators have objected to the emergency funding mechanism, arguing
The House and Senate bills both propose distributing their funding increases relatively evenly across NIH institutes and centers. The following chart summarizes their non-emergency proposals for five institutes that provide substantial support to work in the physical sciences.

The House
Selected priorities
COVID-19. The House stipulates that at least half the $5 billion in emergency funds be divided among NIH’s constituent institutes and centers in proportion to their current budgets, resulting in each receiving at least a 7% budget increase. It adds that these funds “may be used to offset the costs related to reductions in laboratory productivity resulting from interruptions or shutdowns of research activity in fiscal year 2020.” In contrast, the Senate states its bill is focused on “annual funding needs unrelated to the COVID-19 pandemic” and that it intends to address pandemic-related needs through separate supplemental appropriations as necessary.
However, the Senate does propose $55 million be distributed across NIH’s network of 12 Regional Biocontainment Laboratories

NIH Director Francis Collins testifying at a Senate hearing on vaccines.
(Image credit – Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee)
Artificial intelligence. Both the House and Senate express support for NIH’s artificial intelligence research efforts, with the Senate specifically proposing $25 million in “targeted funding to bridge the gap between the biomedical and computer science communities to maximize the promise of AI.” The Senate also directs NIH to explore ways to increase university participation in national AI efforts and urges the agency to leverage investments in university-based supercomputing capabilities to help meet its expanding computational needs. NIH requested $50 million for a new effort to use AI and machine learning techniques to better understand and treat chronic disease.
Collaboration with national labs. The House report encourages NIH to continue coordinating with the Department of Energy and its national laboratories, emphasizing how their supercomputing resources could help address NIH’s “rapidly growing data and computational challenges.” Appropriators in both the House and Senate also encourage NIH to “explore novel applications for radiopharmaceuticals and leverage next-generation advanced manufacturing techniques for isotope production being made by DOE-funded research universities and national laboratories.”
Harassment. In last year’s appropriations legislation, Congress directed NIH to institute a policy requiring that institutions report when “key personnel” are removed from grants due to harassment concerns. In June, the agency updated its guidance
Diversity. Registering concern over a “continued lack of diversity at NIH among staff and grantees,” House appropriators direct the agency to develop a strategic plan to address racial, ethnic, and gender disparities among NIH researchers, focusing particularly on reducing barriers in access to grant funding. They also direct NIH to establish a scholarship program that encourages African American students to pursue careers in medicine and biomedical research, citing concerns
Racism and policing. Citing recent statements from the American Medical Association
Research security. The Senate report states that appropriators “remain concerned about foreign threats to the research infrastructure in the United States,” particularly the impact of the Chinese government’s talent recruitment programs. It states that as of June 2020 NIH had investigated
Grant award justification. While expressing continued commitment to funding NIH research, the Senate asserts the agency must take steps to ensure funds are used to fulfill its core mission. Accordingly, it directs NIH to provide written justification, accessible to the public, describing how each of its grant awards “promotes efforts to seek fundamental knowledge about the nature and behavior of living systems and/or the application of that knowledge to enhance health, lengthen life, and reduce illness and disability.”
Infrastructure modernization. While both the House and Senate propose to keep base funding for NIH’s Buildings and Facilities account flat at $200 million, the Senate proposes transferring $229 million from a special fund to support additional facilities projects and the House proposes $225 million in emergency funding. In light of a 2019 National Academies report