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Society for Epidemiologic Research (SER) Presidential Addresses
 

Outgoing SER President Critical of NIH

Makes Recommendations to Improve Funding Procedures

“T here’s good news and bad news” that’s how outgoing SER president Elizabeth Barrett-Connor described the current status of funding for epidemiologic research. Speaking at a plenary session of the 17th annual meeting of the Society for Epidemiologic Research held in Houston in mid-June, Dr. Barrett-Connor noted that there has been a 1.5 fold increase in real funds over recent years, and that “things are not as bad as they seem, although they could be better.”

Among the other encouraging developments, she pointed to the growth of non-student membership in the SER now standing at approximately 1400, and to the increased recognition of the value of epidemiology and the consequent increased use of epidemiologists as consultants on research projects. She also noted that recent developments relating to diabetes epidemiology and to organizational changes at NHLBI and at NCI were favorable to epidemiology.

The Bad News

The majority of Dr. Barrett-Connor’s remarks were intended to stimulate changes in the current funding procedures, and she focused on several existing problems. First, she pointed out the costliness of multi-center epidemiologic studies designed usually to test one question. Since private organizations rarely fund epidemiologic research, she observed that basically the NIH “is the only game in town,” and she criticized its unwillingness to approve add-on projects to large studies which would help individual investigators. She was also critical of the NIH for being too big, not sufficiently innovative, and for lacking inter-institute coordination.

Perhaps her harshest criticisms were leveled at the extra-mural advisors. Although she described some of these as excellent, she noted that most are not epidemiologists themselves, and they are too powerful. They were accused of rarely providing positive reinforcement and of acting as if the funds in question were their own money.

Recommendations

Observing that it is much easier to say when something is broke than to tell how to fix it, Dr. Barrett-Connor nevertheless went on to make specific recommendations to improve the current funding procedures for epidemiologic research. Among her recommendations were the following: 1) Create a new separate institute for epidemiology, public health, and preventive medicine; 2) Require at least an MPH or equivalent for NIH administrators; 3) Increase the proportion of investigator-initiated research and decrease the proportion initiated by the agencies; 4) Decrease NIH’s responsiveness to Congress and increase the agency’s awareness of criticism from scientists; 5) Decent- ralize the sources from which funds can be obtained, including perhaps certain state and local agencies; 6) Allow CDC to sponsor more investigator-initiated research; and 7) Sponsor more senior scientists to free them from the burdens of peer review and pressure to publish.

Published June 1984 

Postscript 2000

            Fifteen years later, there is still good news and bad news with regard to NIH funding of epidemiologic research.

Complaints:

The cost of the increasing number of large multi-center contract studies is still a problem and both the cost and the number are increasing. But the ability to answer more than one question has made this approach more cost effective. The incredibly expensive Women’s Health Initiative is likely to be well worth the money in terms of the variety of novel hypotheses that can be addressed using these data.

Although I no longer believe that really big studies are bad, they do sponge up limited NIH resources and R01 funding. Moreover, very big studies tend to be less innovative--the sheer numbers of known covariates that must be transmitted to the dataset discourages add-ons and innovations.

Innovative research is risky (meaning risk of failure, not harm to patient). “Not sufficiently innovative” remains a problem for the NIH as recognized by the last Director and recent mandates to study sections to look for novel ideas. (Of course, the external reviewers don’t like novel ideas very much...more about that below).

One way to get both big and novel is add-ons to test novel ideas. Add-ons to existing or new large studies two obvious advantages: new information can be obtained at relatively low cost using the already established study cohort, and substudies by junior investigators can provide experience and publication opportunities--essential for the academic survival of these unsung heroes of studies.

Inter-institute co-ordination has certainly improved, in part because the large grants need more support to exist and thrive.

Remedies:

1) The suggestion that a new separate institute for epidemiology, public health and preventive medicine be created has not been implemented, or even considered as far as I know. Fortunately, the Centers for Disease Control has assumed some of this role, with somewhat more (but still inadequate) extramural research funding and affiliation with the Emory School of Public Health.

A different kind or epidemiology, perhaps less applied and more etiologic, is now thriving in some Institutes at the NIH--this requires someone with a senior leadership role who insists on its importance and support (e.g., Maureen Harris at the NIDDK). Some other institutes have leaders who believe that the only important research is at the bench, preferably the molecular or genetic-level, and some use their own research priorities to deny funding for epidemiologic studies with highly favorable extramural review and high priority scores.

There is more work to do here, both at the NIH and in the general scientific community. We need to speak for the value of genetic epidemiologists who can improve awareness that we will miss or misunderstand the role of common genes if we fail to consider gene-environment interactions. A recent issue of the American Journal of Epidemiology was devoted to environmental hazards and health, another area where epidemiology, not genetics or molecular biology, is likely to lead the way.

2) An MPH for NIH administrators still seems like a good idea...but one whose time has not yet come. Preferably an MPH in epidemiology, which is, I believe, the basic science of good clinical research.

3) The proportion of investigator-initiated research at the NIH has improved. Two caveats which may limit future progress. The NIH can fund numerous RO1 “bench studies” for the same dollar cost as a single case-control study. And Collaborative Agreements count as investigator-initiated research, although considerable “advice”  provided about the question and the cohort are provided in the program announcement and by the post study section intramural reviewers.

4) It was naive to suggest that the NIH decrease its responsiveness to Congress, from whence its funding flows.

5) Research money has been decentralized and the NIH is no longer the only game in town for epidemiologic studies, especially when the study is a large clinical trial. Such studies are large enough to provide both efficacy data and a placebo group--the latter can be used to study the risk factors for and natural history of the outcomes. Concerns about the excessive influence of industry money are real, but industry has adopted and supported clinical trials and foundations have supported epidemiology and preventive medicine, with largely positive results despite concerns about conflict of interest. In some states, tobacco money has supported excellent investigator-initiated research on medical conditions related to smoking.

6) As noted above, the CDC is sponsoring more investigator-initiated research, but needs more funding and freedom.

7) Freeing senior scientists from the burden of peer review has been accomplished in part with the MERIT awards. These awards allow established investigators to obtain funds for research using shorter grant applications, and are a step in the right direction. MacArthur “genius” awards would be an even better idea--no strings attached and time to think as well as produce data.

8) Recent funding increments have been the most positive change in the NIH-extramural research association. Nevertheless, the percent of grants being funded in the next few years will not increase.
 
 

 
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