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  • Press Release

    AAMC Files Amicus Brief in First Circuit Court of Appeals Opposing NIH Grant Terminations

    Media Contacts

    Christina Spoehr, Sr. Media Relations Specialist

    The AAMC filed a Nov. 19 amicus brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in American Public Health Association et al. v NIH, a case opposing the sudden termination of hundreds of research grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

    The brief was also signed by the Association of American Universities, American Association of State Colleges and Universities, the American Council on Education, the, the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges, the Association of Public and Land-Grant Universities, COGR, and the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities.

    The amicus brief provides the perspective from the research community on the devastating impact of sudden, arbitrary grant terminations on the stability of the research enterprise and the careers of scientists. It asks the court to affirm the district court’s decision to directing the NIH to reinstate grants unlawfully terminated based on a purported “change in agency priorities” and to cease delaying, suspending, or cancelling steps needed to review applications for future or ongoing NIH grant funding.

    “Grant terminations en masse, for reasons wholly unconnected to science, threaten to destabilize the entire system and, with it, the future health of the nation,” the brief asserts. “If federal research grants can be cancelled midstream based on fluctuating political views or policy preferences, that will undermine the government’s longstanding collaborative relationship with academic institutions to advance scientific progress and improve health.”

    The AAMC previously filed an amicus brief with the same co-amici in this case when it was heard in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts.


    The AAMC is a nonprofit association dedicated to improving the health of people everywhere through medical education, clinical care, biomedical research, and community collaborations. Its members are all 162 U.S. medical schools accredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education; 14 Canadian medical schools accredited by the Committee on Accreditation of Canadian Medical Schools; nearly 500 academic health systems and teaching hospitals, including Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers; and more than 70 academic societies. Through these institutions and organizations, the AAMC leads and serves America’s medical schools, academic health systems and teaching hospitals, and the millions of individuals across academic medicine, including more than 210,000 full-time faculty members, 99,000 medical students, 162,000 resident physicians, and 60,000 graduate students and postdoctoral researchers in the biomedical sciences. Through the Alliance of Academic Health Centers International, AAMC membership reaches more than 60 international academic health centers throughout five regional offices across the globe. Learn more at aamc.org.