Reduced support from the US National Library of Medicine threatens to shut down five popular biological databases.
Daily News Roundup
Reduced support from the US National Library of Medicine threatens to shut down five popular biological databases.
The California legislature takes steps to broaden the ability of graduate students to unionize by extending collective bargaining rights to research assistants.
The market for drugs that target rare diseases is expected to rival big pharma blockbusters in the coming decades.
Proposals from researchers receiving more than $1 million a year in NIH funding will be carefully picked over to avoid overlap with ongoing research.
The presumed vice-presidential candidate gets a mixed review on science funding and attitudes.
The rise in the amount of federal money requested through research grants is due to a rise in the overall number of applicants.
The presidential bioethics brain trust unveils its draft recommendations on the use of whole genome sequencing in clinical care and research.
A US federal court rules that procedures in which a patient's own stem cells are extracted, manipulated, and reinjected should be regulated by the FDA.
After years of complaints, the European Commission proposes ways to fix its system in an effort to reinvigorate research on the continent.
The new law reauthorizes fees charged to drug and device makers, creates new fees for the approval of generic drugs.