Race, ethnicity, and NIH research awards

DK Ginther, WT Schaffer, J Schnell, B Masimore, F Liu… - Science, 2011 - science.org
DK Ginther, WT Schaffer, J Schnell, B Masimore, F Liu, LL Haak, R Kington
Science, 2011science.org
We investigated the association between a US National Institutes of Health (NIH) R01
applicant's self-identified race or ethnicity and the probability of receiving an award by using
data from the NIH IMPAC II grant database, the Thomson Reuters Web of Science, and other
sources. Although proposals with strong priority scores were equally likely to be funded
regardless of race, we find that Asians are 4 percentage points and black or African-
American applicants are 13 percentage points less likely to receive NIH investigator-initiated …
We investigated the association between a U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) R01 applicant’s self-identified race or ethnicity and the probability of receiving an award by using data from the NIH IMPAC II grant database, the Thomson Reuters Web of Science, and other sources. Although proposals with strong priority scores were equally likely to be funded regardless of race, we find that Asians are 4 percentage points and black or African-American applicants are 13 percentage points less likely to receive NIH investigator-initiated research funding compared with whites. After controlling for the applicant’s educational background, country of origin, training, previous research awards, publication record, and employer characteristics, we find that black applicants remain 10 percentage points less likely than whites to be awarded NIH research funding. Our results suggest some leverage points for policy intervention.
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