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IU medical research takes a hit from federal budget cuts

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author Joe Ulery, Anchor/Producer

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Tuesday, April 15, 2025   

By Kyla Russell for WISH-TV.
Broadcast version by Joe Ulery for Indiana News Service reporting for the WISH-TV-Free Press Indiana-Public News Service Collaboration


Congress has slashed a decades-old federal medical funding program by more than half.

The Indiana University School of Medicine could be one of the hardest organizations hit.

In 2023, the school was awarded $715,000 from the Congressionally Directed Medical Research Program (CDRMP). As the largest medical school in the U.S., the university was tasked with using the money to improve treatment for mild traumatic brain injuries.

In March, Congress passed a bill that cuts the funding by 57%. The move is leaving doctors worried.

"I'm involved with the entire athletic department, which certainly includes the football team," Dr. Nicholas Port, an IU optometry professor, said recently. "I am quite involved in and was at practice today."

In addition to teaching and several other responsibilities, Post helps care for the school's top athletes. He also specializes in treating traumatic brain injuries.

"The CDRMP is a congressionally mandated research program in the Department of Defense," Port said. "It's been around for at least a decade or two, maybe more, and they fund biomedical research that is relevant to the mission of the Department of Defense."

Under the program, the Department of Defense had $1.5 billion in 2024. That money was dispersed to researchers from across the country.

After Congress cut that budget to $650 million, researchers feared their funding will be cut.

"Well, grants are already very competitive, so they're only funding well less than 10% of the proposals that are submitted each cycle each year," Port said. "There will be fewer grants by 50% or less, so they may only fund 40% of what they funded last year."

Port says they've received little communication about the future of the funding.

Traces of the federal program have started to vanish. The program's web page reads "page not found." It once listed the many research programs it funded.

"That will have direct impact on patient care and a direct impact on developing tools and clinical interventions," Port said. "In my case, we have two clinical trial proposals that we're working on proposing. Our chances of getting those funded will go down tremendously."

Several other organizations in Indiana receive a small amount of CDMRP funding. The change means they too may have less opportunity to get funding through the program.


Kyla Russell wrote this article for WISH-TV.


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