News

The National Institutes of Health announced on Monday that the biomedical agency will no longer award funding to new grant ...
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), in collaboration with the National Institutes of Health (NIH), hosted a workshop ...
In a historic move, the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced today that it will no longer seek research ...
Hopkins expert Thomas Hartung discusses an announcement by the nation's largest biomedical research funder that it will no longer consider grant proposals that do not include alternative testing model ...
"I don't think we should do research on dogs or cats," NIH Deputy Director Nicole Kleinstreuer said. "Absolutely not." ...
The announcement, made by Acting NIH Deputy Director for Program Coordination, Planning, and Strategic Initiatives (DPCPSI), ...
The end to animal testing marks the beginning of better biomedicine Animal models have become obsolete A technician holds a laboratory mouse at the University of Geneva.
The massive stakes of the Trump administration’s plans to end animal testing Is Trump doing the right thing on animal research for the wrong reasons?
If there’s anything the Trump administration has gotten unequivocally right (besides inadvertently helping Mark Carney become prime minister of Canada), it’s this: Modern science, for all its ...
The world’s largest funder of biomedical and public health research in will now prioritize innovative health research, leaving outdated animal experiments behind.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is following in the FDA’s footsteps—away from animal testing. The NIH plans to establish a new office meant to develop nonanimal methods for biomedical ...
Traditional and new laboratory tools along with advances in AI are outlining a new paradigm in human disease modeling.