By Emily Greenhalgh
PBN Web Editor
Twitter: @EGreenhalgh
WASHINGTON – During the fiscal year ended June 30, the National Institutes of Health awarded a total of $146.96 million in grants to Rhode Island hospitals, universities and companies.
Brown University was the largest beneficiary during the fiscal year, with 177 awards totaling $58.7 million. The largest grant was $2.9 million for a project titled “Reuse in R.I.: A state-based approach to complex exposures,” awarded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
Rhode Island Hospital pulled in the second-most cash from the National Institutes, with 74 awards totaling $28.6 million. The hospital’s awards included 65 research grants totaling $27.6 million, five training grants totaling $876,997 and two fellowships totaling $103,280.
The Miriam Hospital landed 47 awards totaling $18.5 million during the fiscal year. The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and the National Institute on Drug Abuse awarded 22 grants totaling $8.5 million to the hospital.
Twenty-two grants to the University of Rhode Island totaled $14.3 million during the fiscal year ended June 30. The school drew funding from 11 different National Institutes of Health, including three awards totaling $4.5 million from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
Rounding out the top five NIH beneficiaries in Rhode Island was Women & Infants Hospital, which was awarded 21 grants totaling $8.3 million.
The other awardees were as follows:
During the fiscal year 2012, the National Institutes of Health awarded $22.1 billion to organizations, schools and businesses across the United States.