Reviewing Peer Review

Tired of waiting for the National Institutes of Health to approve your grant proposal?

| 4 min read

Register for free to listen to this article
Listen with Speechify
0:00
4:00
Share

Tired of waiting for the National Institutes of Health to approve your grant proposal? If so, you're not alone: First-time applicants now wait an average of nine months to learn if their grant proposals have been approved, and as long as two years if they must revise and resubmit them. But help is on the way, say officials. The NIH is evaluating its peer review system to improve the process and make it more efficient, and is scheduling a pilot program to start in February to shorten the review cycle for new applicants. The pilot, which will be rolled out in about 20 NIH study sections, will shorten many of the steps in the application review process and also let first-time investigators submit revised applications four months sooner. If successful, the process may be expanded to all NIH grant applicants.

The topic of peer review "usually comes up within 30 ...

Interested in reading more?

Become a Member of

The Scientist Logo
Receive full access to digital editions of The Scientist, as well as TS Digest, feature stories, more than 35 years of archives, and much more!
Already a member? Login Here

Meet the Author

  • Ted Agres

    This person does not yet have a bio.

Published In

Share
Image of a woman in a microbiology lab whose hair is caught on fire from a Bunsen burner.
April 1, 2025, Issue 1

Bunsen Burners and Bad Hair Days

Lab safety rules dictate that one must tie back long hair. Rosemarie Hansen learned the hard way when an open flame turned her locks into a lesson.

View this Issue
Conceptual image of biochemical laboratory sample preparation showing glassware and chemical formulas in the foreground and a scientist holding a pipette in the background.

Taking the Guesswork Out of Quality Control Standards

sartorius logo
An illustration of PFAS bubbles in front of a blue sky with clouds.

PFAS: The Forever Chemicals

sartorius logo
Unlocking the Unattainable in Gene Construction

Unlocking the Unattainable in Gene Construction

dna-script-primarylogo-digital
Concept illustration of acoustic waves and ripples.

Comparing Analytical Solutions for High-Throughput Drug Discovery

sciex

Products

Green Cooling

Thermo Scientific™ Centrifuges with GreenCool Technology

Thermo Fisher Logo
Singleron Avatar

Singleron Biotechnologies and Hamilton Bonaduz AG Announce the Launch of Tensor to Advance Single Cell Sequencing Automation

Zymo Research Logo

Zymo Research Launches Research Grant to Empower Mapping the RNome

Magid Haddouchi, PhD, CCO

Cytosurge Appoints Magid Haddouchi as Chief Commercial Officer