25 Organizations That Received Top NIH Funding in 2013

The following organizations received the most funding from the National Institutes of Health in the 2013 fiscal year.

Data below are organized by "system or main campus," which can include several entities or campuses. For example, the University of California includes several UC campuses, including those at Berkeley, Davis, Irvine, Los Angeles, San Francisco and others. The Partners Healthcare System entry includes Boston-based Massachusetts General Hospital, Brigham and Women's Hospital and three other healthcare facilities, for example.

These grants include those for research projects, research centers, research and development contracts, training (either individual or institutional), construction and other programs.

Note: Although this list is arranged by the amount of funding each organization received, the NIH says "these data should not be interpreted as a ranking of institutions by NIH." There are several ways in which funding data can be aggregated across universities' schools and departments "that can alter the ordering of institutions," according to the NIH. Data do not include projects funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.

1. University of California — $1.71 billion
2. Partners Healthcare System (Boston) — $663 million
3. University of Texas — $580 million
4. Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore) — $558 million
5. University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia) — $445 million
6. University of Washington (Seattle) — $428 million  
7. University of North Carolina (Chapel Hill) — $409 million
8. University of Michigan  — $407 million
9. University of Pittsburgh — $396 million
10. Harvard University (Cambridge, Mass.) — $352 million
11. Stanford (Calif.) University — $352 million
12. Columbia University (New York) — $346 million
13. Yale University (New Haven, Conn.) — $343 million
14. Duke University (Durham, N.C.) — $329 million
15. Washington University (St. Louis) — $320 million
16. Vanderbilt University Medical Center (Nashville) — $301 million
17. University of Minnesota — $255 million
18. Emory University (Atlanta) — $253 million
19. Case Western Reserve University (Cleveland) — $247 million
20. University of Wisconsin — $244 million
21. Oregon State Higher Education — $235 million
22. Scripps Research Institute (La Jolla, Calif.) — $228 million
23. University of Colorado — $225 million
24. New York University (New York City) — $219 million
25. Northwestern University (Evanston, Ill.) — $208 million

More Articles on the National Institutes of Health:

NIH Puts $31.5M Into 3 Hospital, University-Based Centers for Accelerated Innovations
AHRQ, CDC, NIH Suspend Health, Quality Services as HHS Responds to Government Shutdown
National Institutes of Health, Defense to Create Traumatic Brain Injury Database

Copyright © 2024 Becker's Healthcare. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy. Cookie Policy. Linking and Reprinting Policy.

 

Articles We Think You'll Like

 

Featured Whitepapers

Featured Webinars