“We’ve had communication pauses before,” said Shihipar, the Brown University research associate. “We haven’t had an extensive sort of all-agency pause, which pauses these critical research functions.”
“We’ve had communication pauses before,” said Shihipar, the Brown University research associate. “We haven’t had an extensive sort of all-agency pause, which pauses these critical research functions.”

Trump Administration Actions Cause ‘Widespread Panic’ Among Some Rhode Island Scientists

Last week, the National Institutes of Health abruptly canceled long-scheduled grant review panels and shut down external communications — with little explanation

Last week, the National Institutes of Health abruptly canceled long-scheduled grant review panels and shut down external communications — with little explanation

Share
“We’ve had communication pauses before,” said Shihipar, the Brown University research associate. “We haven’t had an extensive sort of all-agency pause, which pauses these critical research functions.”
“We’ve had communication pauses before,” said Shihipar, the Brown University research associate. “We haven’t had an extensive sort of all-agency pause, which pauses these critical research functions.”
Trump Administration Actions Cause ‘Widespread Panic’ Among Some Rhode Island Scientists
Copy

Concern washed over the scientific research community in Rhode Island after the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services paused all external communications on Jan. 22.

When researchers from across the country began sharing news about sudden cancellations of so-called “study sections”, grant review panels coordinated through the National Institutes of Health, the worry only grew.

“It’s concerning that the major Institute in the United States has really ceased communication with us researchers and medical scientists,” said Dr. Philip Chan, associate professor at Brown University and Chief Medical Officer at Open Door Health, a clinic in Providence.

When the Trump Administration froze federal grant and loan funding on Tuesday, only to backtrack on Wednesday, it left recipients of federal aid all over the country confused. And in Rhode Island, it further compounded what Abdullah Shihipar, a research associate at Brown University, called “widespread panic.”

“All of these actions in tandem are concerning about the federal government’s ability not just to fund research but to fund critical programs across the country,” Shihipar said.

Chan said he had “not seen anything like this before” and that it “saddens” him to see research-based clinical and public health institutions “undermined and chipped away at.”

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

The stay marks the fourth time a federal judge has ruled against the Trump administration’s effort to halt offshore wind construction
State Rep. Megan Cotter has introduced legislation to incentivize school districts to build regional partnerships
A Senate study commission backs a new public medical school as part of a long-term plan to expand primary care
Removing GLP-1s from Rhode Island’s Medicaid formulary for weight loss would save $6.3 million in general revenue, according to McKee’s proposed budget
The South County native, known for his novels and political activism, has produced a book featuring six short stories
‘I think I thought it would be like a green paradise, that everyone would be driving around in their electric cars, that all of the houses would have solar panels on them, that there would be those tree wind turbines on the street’