In this editorial, the author argues that the drop in US funding of
science thwarts dreams of the next generation. The next being young scientist
and innovators like them. He states that the amount of biological research has
slowed down and the National Institutes of Health Director Francis S.
Collins says the situation is “profoundly discouraging”. According to a
ASBMB(American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology) survey, 18
percent of scientists are considering continuing their research career in
another country. With only about 2 Percent of research grants being approved
the government is seriously affecting research that might help us in the near
future. The author argues that public funding is essential and that funding
from foundations and organizations only accounts to a third of funding.
Generations of science research has saved us from fatal diseases. If 2/3 of the
funding is government funding and there is a lack of funding, how will we be
able to progress scientifically. If other countries are increasing they’re
funding by twenty percent. And we as a world power are cutting funding where in
our country, our first Ebola patient was diagnosed and the experimental Ebola
drug Zmapp being unavailable to the general public including that patient. The
government should be projecting funds not slowing funds down in a time of an
epidemic somewhere in our world. In order for the general public to be more
efficient as citizens they must be healthy, because health promotes
productivity. The productivity of our nation is essential to our place in the
world as a leader. Funding of scientists to find and research groundbreaking
medicine is what keeps us a step ahead.
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